Silence didn’t arrive suddenly; it accumulated where language kept falling short.
At first, I still tried. I would start explanations, adjust them mid-sentence, soften conclusions. Each attempt felt like negotiating with something that didn’t want to be translated.
Eventually, the effort outweighed the outcome. Silence began to feel less risky than saying the wrong thing again.
What replaced language wasn’t emptiness — it was containment.
When Silence Becomes the Safer Option
Silence didn’t require clarification. It didn’t invite correction or reassurance. It didn’t shrink the experience into something more acceptable.
By not explaining, I avoided watching people respond to a version of my experience that wasn’t accurate.
The relief was subtle but real.
Silence can feel like protection when language keeps distorting what you mean.
Over time, silence started filling the space where connection used to be. Conversations became transactional. Answers stayed brief.
From the outside, nothing seemed wrong. From the inside, something essential was no longer being shared.
This quiet substitution — silence in place of language — sits at the center of The Language Gap.
What Silence Slowly Creates
Silence changes how you are perceived. It reads as stability, competence, composure.
Internally, it often signals withdrawal. Not from responsibility, but from being seen accurately.
That distance echoed another quiet loss I would later recognize in Grief for the Expected Life.
Silence filled the gap not because I had nothing to say, but because words kept failing me.

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