Perpetually “In Progress”

Daily writing prompt
Something on your “to-do list” that never gets done.

There’s a line on my to‑do list that has survived every season of my life. It’s made it through new notebooks, new apps, new routines, new versions of myself. It’s not a chore. It’s not an errand. It’s not even something you can “complete” in any normal sense. The line simply says: let go of Aada.

And every day, I move through my life like someone who has already done it. I write. I think. I build. I take care of the people who are actually here. My days have structure. My mind has clarity. My choices make sense. On the surface, I look like someone who has already closed that chapter cleanly.

But the emotional system doesn’t move on command. My heart is still a few steps behind, carrying the residue of a connection that mattered.

To understand why, you’d have to understand the shape of the friendship — how it formed, how it deepened, and how it eventually unraveled under the weight of things neither of us fully named at the time.

We met through my ex‑wife, which already gave the whole thing a strange geometry. She was the childhood friend, the one with shared history and old stories and a lifetime of context I didn’t have. But over time, the gravitational pull shifted. We became the ones who talked. We became the ones who understood each other’s shorthand. We became the ones who built a private channel that felt separate from everything else.

There was never romance between us, but there were moments when my feelings brushed up against something tender. Not a crush, not a fantasy — just those involuntary blushes that happen when you admire someone’s mind and feel seen in return. And the thing I will always respect about her is that she didn’t run from that. She didn’t make it awkward. She didn’t shame me. She didn’t treat me like a problem to manage. She stayed in the conversation. She worked with me through it. She handled it with a steadiness most people don’t have. I admired her for that then, and I still do.

For a long time, the friendship felt like a rare thing — a connection that lived in its own register, built on intellect, humor, vulnerability, and a kind of emotional resonance that’s hard to find as an adult. It wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t chaotic. It was just… ours.

But the foundation wasn’t as solid as I believed. There were distortions — not malicious ones, but small, accumulating misalignments. A version of herself she curated. A version of me she assumed. A version of the friendship that didn’t quite match reality. And when the truth finally surfaced, it didn’t just crack the trust. It cracked the architecture of the entire relationship.

I didn’t explode. I didn’t cut her out. I didn’t rewrite her as a villain. That’s not how I move through the world. I tried to understand the insecurity behind the choices. I tried to see the human being instead of the mistake. And I did. I still do. I don’t carry bitterness. I don’t carry resentment. I don’t carry the desire to punish or erase.

But forgiveness doesn’t rebuild what was lost. It just clears the rubble.

Once the truth was visible, the friendship couldn’t continue in its old form. The scaffolding was gone. The emotional logic had shifted. And I realized — with a kind of quiet, painful clarity — that I had been investing in a connection that wasn’t built to hold the weight I’d placed on it.

So I stepped back. I moved forward. I built a life that didn’t orbit her. I found my own rhythm, my own grounding, my own sense of self that didn’t depend on her presence or her approval.

My mind did that work cleanly.

But the heart is slower. The heart remembers the good parts. The heart remembers the late‑night messages, the shared jokes, the feeling of being understood. The heart remembers the version of her that felt real, even if it wasn’t the whole truth. The heart remembers the almost‑friendship we were building — the one that could have been extraordinary if it had been honest.

So the line stays on the list: let go of Aada.

Not because I’m clinging. Not because I’m stuck. Not because I want her back in my life. But because the emotional tether hasn’t fully dissolved yet. It’s thinner now, quieter, more distant — but it’s still there, like a faint thread that hasn’t snapped.

What I’ve learned is that some things don’t get “done.” They fade. They soften. They lose their charge. They stop being present and start being memory. You don’t sever them. You outgrow them.

Letting go isn’t a task. It’s a slow recalibration.

Some days, I feel nothing. Some days, I feel the echo. Some days, I feel the clarity. Some days, I feel the tenderness of what was good. Some days, I feel the ache of what never quite became. And some days, I forget she ever occupied that much space in my life — which is its own kind of progress.

One morning, I’ll wake up and realize the thread is gone. Not cut. Not ripped. Just quietly released. And when that day comes, I won’t need to cross anything off. The list will update itself.

Until then, I’m letting my heart move at its own pace.

I know what I really want, and it is something that she is no longer willing to give, which is the truth. Instead of saying, “I’m sorry I lied,” it was, “I’m tired of the jabs regarding my supposed lies.” It was that the lies weren’t that big, when they rearranged my sense of reality. It was, “well, I’m just never going to tell you anything again” when she got caught.

She was never sorry for the consequences she introduced into my life because she didn’t actually believe that there were any. She did not listen to my point of view, and insists that whatever I need to say to move on is fine.

What I need to say to move on is to remind myself that I don’t like living in a bubble. Aada didn’t like me as much when she couldn’t control me…. when trying to scare me didn’t work.

She told me from day one that her view of love was completely fucked up. I took that as a personal challenge, that I’d be able to show her something different. Well, that was certainly true…. but it wasn’t pretty and it wasn’t clean.

It’s not everything I wished it could be, so it’s better that I don’t have it.

I have offered to build something stable with her at every point, but at what point do I have some self-preservation and say, “Aada is not emotionally mature enough to be in relationship with you? Her entire ethos is ‘don’t talk about it.'”

The slow recalibration is realizing that she told me who she was, and I didn’t believe her.

The disillusionment is setting in, and my emotions waffle.

Sometimes, I want to crawl back even while I am pushing myself to produce senior-level ideas for Microsoft in hopes of moving 3,000 miles away.

But what I really can’t take is that when I stopped writing about her, she stopped reading. It was always about adoration, and the moment I stopped, our friendship was over.

So the tie to Aada remains, but don’t ask me how I feel about it.


Scored by Copilot, Conducted by Leslie Lanagan

What is a To-Do List?

Something on your “to-do list” that never gets done.

I’m AuDHD, so I’m kidding. Of course I know what they are. I make them all the time. By the hundreds. Then, “ooh. Snickers.”

My dad did the “Daily Franklin” planner training when I was a kid, so when he showed me how tasks lists work, I use them to this day. And it doesn’t work if I do it on my computer. I have to physically write it in a journal before I start adding things to my Google Tasks. That’s because Google Tasks doesn’t use the Daily Franklin method.

You need three columns- Priority, Task, and Status.

That way, you can do your task list stream-of-consciousness and then have room on the left to figure out what’s most important, represented by A, B, C, etc. Instead of just crossing things off, the “status” column can be a dot until it’s a check. A dot means “in process.” My journals are a mess because I can’t draw for shit and my tables look awful, but I’ve been doing this for 35 years. I have tried, and doing it in Excel does not work for me because the retention comes from holding the pen.

Demand avoidance makes me unable to do a lot, but I do what I can with the spoons I have. Link is to a PDF of the original blog entry, because I couldn’t find a copy in HTML. It’s one of the best blog entries I’ve ever read, so if you have friends with long term illnesses, it would help you to read it. I had to save the file to my OneDrive and share the link, so please let me know if there are issues with it. I’ve tested it on my own machine, which is a guarantee it won’t work for anyone else.

With disabilities, the recurring refrain (in A flat minor) is “but you don’t look sick.” When I figure out how to do that, I’ll let you know…. but honestly, it’s not a hard leap. Most people know I don’t move right, my eye drifts, I tilt my head to the side a lot because I have monocular vision and I’m trying to use my good eye….. leading people often to say, “are you looking at me?” “What are you looking at?” “I’m over here.” I’ve been teased mercilessly my whole life and it’s gotten better with age, yet some adults are still rude. Some adults still only have the emotional capacity of a teenager, and I meet most of those people at work.

Neurotypical people don’t know how to communicate with the neurodivergent, and no one knows how to communicate with the physically disabled because it’s like someone died, in some respects. When someone close to you dies, people genuinely and repeatedly do not know what to say. They handle people with disabilities the same way. It’s amazing how many people think teasing me before they even know me is the right tack.

I don’t even let my friends tease me (about this), and if you knew me, you’d know that. However, my friends would have the good sense not to say those things in the first place (or some of them would, anyway). A stranger or a coworker has no such qualms.

So, mostly the thing that never gets done on my task list is shutting down ableism, and it won’t go away in my lifetime. Everything is a dot because of my processing disorders and physical limitations.

When all I want is a check.