The distance wasn’t between me and others — it was between experience and expression.
Inside, the feeling had continuity. It carried from one day to the next, informed decisions, altered how things landed.
Out loud, it fractured. I heard myself summarizing instead of describing, offering conclusions without the weight that led to them.
The more often this happened, the more aware I became of the gap itself.
When Language Filters Experience
Speaking requires selection. You choose what to include, what to omit, what sounds reasonable.
That process filtered out nuance first. Then tone. Then the quiet accumulation that made the experience what it was.
What remained was accurate enough to pass, but incomplete.
Saying something true doesn’t guarantee that what mattered survives the saying.
I could feel myself adjusting language in real time, watching meaning narrow as sentences formed.
Over time, that narrowing became familiar. I stopped expecting words to carry the full weight.
This persistent distance is part of The Language Gap, where expression never quite catches up to experience.
What Lives in the Gap
The gap created room for misinterpretation. For assumptions. For conclusions I hadn’t drawn myself.
I learned to live with that distortion, even as it shaped how I was understood.
That quiet compromise echoed another loss I would later recognize in Grief for the Expected Life.
What I said was never false — it was simply smaller than what I felt.

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