It wasn’t a single moment of being misunderstood, but the accumulation that changed what I expected from conversations.
Early on, misunderstanding felt jarring. I would replay conversations afterward, trying to locate where meaning slipped.
Over time, that impulse faded. I stopped being surprised when responses didn’t line up with what I meant.
Misunderstanding shifted from exception to baseline.
When Adjustment Replaces Correction
Correcting misunderstandings requires energy and optimism — the belief that clarity will change the outcome.
Once that belief weakened, adjustment took its place. I learned how to proceed without alignment.
Conversations became about continuity, not accuracy.
What happens repeatedly stops feeling wrong and starts feeling normal.
I noticed how my language adapted. Shorter explanations. Fewer details. Less emphasis on nuance.
It wasn’t resignation so much as calibration — speaking in ways that fit the level of understanding I expected.
This quiet normalization appears throughout The Language Gap, where misalignment becomes routine rather than disruptive.
What Normalized Misunderstanding Changes
When misunderstanding becomes normal, connection stops being assumed. It becomes conditional.
I learned to operate without expecting to be fully understood, even in familiar spaces.
That shift echoed another quiet loss I would later recognize in Grief for the Expected Life.
Misunderstanding became normal the moment I stopped expecting clarity to arrive.

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