The words made the trip, but the meaning didn’t arrive intact.
I could tell when it happened — the moment a response came back slightly off, angled toward something adjacent but not essential.
What I had said was accurate. What was heard was familiar. The difference mattered.
Each exchange left me feeling like I was speaking a language no one else quite shared.
When Meaning Shifts Mid-Conversation
Language is supposed to bridge inner experience and shared reality. Instead, it sometimes redirects meaning into something easier to process.
I noticed how quickly responses latched onto recognizable phrases while bypassing the intent behind them.
What came back felt translated — but into the wrong dialect.
Being lost in translation doesn’t mean you spoke incorrectly — it means meaning changed along the way.
Over time, I began anticipating the mistranslation. I spoke with the expectation that something would be missed.
That expectation reshaped how much effort I put into explaining myself at all.
This recurring drift appears throughout The Language Gap, where meaning shifts before it lands.
What Living in Translation Costs
Constant mistranslation creates fatigue. Not from speaking, but from correcting meaning that never quite holds.
I learned to accept partial understanding as the ceiling.
That acceptance echoed another quiet loss I would later recognize in Grief for the Expected Life.
I felt lost in translation because meaning kept changing after I spoke.

Leave a Reply