Who is a cycle breaker? If you have been exposed to traumatic, abusive, homophobic, or patriarchal structures that questioned the very essence of your existence, and painfully detached yourself from what once seemed like home, you are a cycle breaker. If you were a victim to cycles of constant neglect and shame and decided that […]
If you have been exposed to traumatic, abusive, homophobic, or patriarchal structures that questioned the very essence of your existence, and painfully detached yourself from what once seemed like home, you are a cycle breaker. If you were a victim to cycles of constant neglect and shame and decided that you deserved better, you are a cycle breaker. If you had to break cycles of generational trauma to survive, you are one.
Despite what the poets say, the pain really isn’t beautiful. Breaking cycles is a process that will demand your emotional space, time, and energy. You might have been called a rebel, sometimes even termed the ungrateful. You’re let to live in doubt and flinch at your name. Second-guessing and stopping at every turn, the journey is undeniably hard.
“Time didn’t heal, but it anesthetized. The human mind could only feel so much.”
― P.D. James
Some of these marks, scars, or wounds might refuse to leave. What might change is the effect they have on you. Maybe someday, when the pain subsides, you’ll look at your scars, and they will stop reminding you of the knife. Maybe one day they’ll remind you of the fight you fought and won. Maybe one day it’ll all just be a memory. Maybe one day it’ll not hurt you anymore. Someday you’re going to breathe the air you deserve and feel at home.
Writer: Annie Iniya J