I was more rattled than I thought. Here are my thoughts about the last 20 hours.
There is a particular kind of anxiety that rises only when I begin to step into my own life. It doesn’t show up when I’m hiding, or shrinking, or surviving. It waits. It watches. It knows that the moment I start moving toward visibility — real visibility, the kind that comes from clarity rather than performance — I will be at my most exposed. And that is when my ghosts come.
People talk about ghosts as memories or regrets or old versions of ourselves. But the ghosts that matter most to me are not the ones that haunt the past. They are the ones that rise when the future begins to open. They are the echoes of every moment I was misinterpreted, every time my intentions were rewritten by someone else, every instance where my honesty was treated as harm. They are the reminders of how dangerous it once felt to be seen.
And the truth is, my ghosts don’t appear when I’m doing nothing. They appear when I’m doing something that matters.
I feel it now because my writing is gaining traction, because strangers are reading me with seriousness, because my voice is beginning to carry. I’m stepping onto a ledge — not recklessly, not impulsively, but with the quiet conviction of someone who has finally found the work that feels like theirs. And the ledge is where my ghosts do their best work.
They don’t try to push me off. They don’t need to. All they have to do is whisper the old stories: Remember what happened last time you were visible. Remember how they misunderstood you. Remember how they turned your clarity into accusation. Remember how your truth became someone else’s wound.
My ghosts don’t need to be accurate. They only need to be familiar.
And so the anxiety rises — not because I’m doing something wrong, but because I’m doing something right. I’m stepping into a season where my words matter, where my ideas have weight, where my voice is no longer confined to the small rooms where people already know my history. I’m being read by people who don’t know the context, who don’t know the ghosts, who don’t know the long road that brought me here. And that is where my fear of misinterpretation lives.
I’ve never been afraid of speaking. I’ve been afraid of being mis-seen.
There is a difference.
I don’t write to wound. I don’t write to provoke. I don’t write to settle scores. I write because I see something clearly and want to name it. I write because clarity is my native language. I write because the world is easier to navigate when its architecture is visible. But clarity has edges, and edges can cut, even when they are not meant to.
And so my ghosts rise to remind me of every time someone mistook my precision for cruelty, my honesty for aggression, my boundaries for betrayal. They remind me of the moments when someone else’s fragility became my indictment. They remind me that being seen has never been neutral.
But here is the part my ghosts never mention: I survived all of that. I learned from it. I grew sharper, not harder. I learned to write with intention, not apology. I learned to speak in a voice that is unmistakably mine — steady, humane, unflinching. I learned that I can be clear without being cruel, direct without being destructive, honest without being harmful.
My ghosts don’t know what to do with that version of me.
They only know how to rattle the old one.
And so the anxiety I feel now — the overwhelming sense of exposure, the fear that someone will misunderstand me, the instinct to pull back just when the world begins to lean in — is not a sign that I’m doing something dangerous. It’s a sign that I’m doing something unprecedented in my own life.
I’m stepping onto a ledge I built myself.
And ghosts hate ledges. They prefer basements.
The ledge is where I can see the horizon. The ledge is where I can feel the wind. The ledge is where I can look down and realize how far I’ve climbed. The ledge is where I understand, maybe for the first time, that I am not the person who was misinterpreted all those years ago. I am the person who kept going anyway.
My ghosts rattle because they know they are losing their power. They know that once I take a full step onto that ledge — once I inhabit my voice without flinching, once I let myself be seen without apology — they will have nothing left to hold onto.
They cannot follow me into the future. They can only echo the past.
And the past is not where I’m headed.
The anxiety doesn’t mean I’m unsafe. It means I’m unaccustomed. It means I’m entering a season where my work is no longer private, where my ideas are no longer contained, where my voice is no longer something I keep in the dark. It means I’m becoming legible to the world, and legibility is always a little terrifying at first.
But here is the quiet truth beneath all of this: my ghosts only rattle when the living begin to move.
I am moving. I am writing. I am stepping into a season that is mine. And my ghosts — loud as they may be — are only noise. They cannot stop me. They cannot define me. They cannot rewrite the story I am finally writing for myself.
They can only remind me of how far I’ve come.
Scored by Copilot. Conducted by Leslie Lanagan.

