A Balanced Understanding
On how we learn to hold both the weight and the weather of being alive

On how we learn to hold both the weight and the weather of being alive
I used to think wisdom
would arrive like a verdict—
a clean gavel of light,
one last clarifying thunderclap
to organize the mess.
Instead, it crept in sideways.
like morning through blinds,
striping the unmade bed
where my certainties once slept.
I learned balance first.
from the body—
from ankles that rolled
when I walked too fast downhill,
from knees that caught gravel
on the days I refused
to slow.
To stand upright
is already a negotiation:
gravity making its constant argument,
muscles offering their quiet dissent.
No one told me
how much of life
would feel like that—
swaying between
what pulls me down?
and what keeps me here.
Understanding did not come
with trumpets.
It came with late bills.
cold coffee,
and the text I never answered
because I chose myself
for once,
and then spent three days
feeling like a villain
for daring to rest.
It came with my mother’s sigh.
on the phone—
that soft, weathered sound
of someone who has just realized
you cannot protect your child.
from their own reflection.
It came when an old friend called.
from the side of a road,
voice shaking like loose glass,
and I put my shoes on.
without asking for details.
Balance, I’ve learned,
is not a pose you hold.
for the camera;
it is the blur between frames.
You never post:
the wobble,
the almost-fall,
the hand that reaches out
to steady you,
or doesn’t.
There are days
I believe in progress.
in gentle arcs of becoming,
in the way a scar
can be both memory
and map.
On those days,
I eat slowly.
walk soft.
and speak to myself
like someone I would miss
if they were gone.
Other days,
balance feels like punishment—
a tightrope strung
between expectation
and exhaustion,
crowd roaring below,
their cheers and jeers
indistinguishable
from this height.
On those days,
I remember the therapist.
who told me:
“You are allowed
to step off the wire.
You are allowed
to lie down
on solid ground
and let the show go on
without you.”
Understanding is this:
learning that survival
sometimes looks like bravery,
and sometimes looks
like canceling plans
because the thought
of small talk
makes your ribs
ache.
I used to chase certainty.
like a promotion—
something to be earned,
framed,
hung on the clean wall
of a curated life.
But balance is messier—
a desk crowded
with half-read books,
a browser with
too many open tabs,
a heart that loves
more people
than it has
met yet.
Now I suspect
we are not here.
to solve ourselves.
We are here.
to study the weather inside us,
to chart its changing fronts
with the patience
of storm-watchers:
to sit with the days
of hard rain
without deciding
they mean forever.
to trust the timid blue
behind a torn cloud,
even when
we cannot feel its warmth.
yet.
A balanced understanding
is not the end of questions,
but the end of cruelty
toward the part of us
still asking.
It is knowing
you can forgive.
what you did
to survive,
while still grieving
the rooms you never entered
because your hands were busy
holding the roof on.
It is admitting
you were wrong.
without laying your head
on the anvil of shame.
It is loving people.
for who they are
without turning yourself
into a contortionist
to keep them comfortable.
It is letting your anger
call to action
without letting it
choose your words.
when you are tired.
It is being able to say,
“I do not know,”
and feel that sentence
as a doorway
rather than a verdict.
Tonight, balance looks like this:
I close the laptop.
before the light
burns through my eyes.
I leave the dishes.
in the sink,
trusting they will not
Define me.
I send one message.
I’ve been avoiding,
and let another
Wait.
I drink water.
like it is a kind of prayer
for the body
I once treated
like a rental car.
Then I sit by the window,
watching the city
shift from neon
to silence,
and I tell the younger version
of myself—
the one still sprinting
toward some invisible finish line—
“Come here.
We walk now.
We breathe.
We do not have to be
all light
or all shadows.
We are the flicker.
between.
We are allowed
to be unfinished
and still
be worthy
of being held.”
And in the glass,
for a moment,
I see it—
not perfection,
not certainty,
just a person
standing in the half-light,
finally learning
to hold their own weight
without apology,
and to call that
understanding.
About the Creator
abualyaanart
I write thoughtful, experience-driven stories about technology, digital life, and how modern tools quietly shape the way we think, work, and live.
I believe good technology should support life
Abualyaanart


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