I wasn't supposed to stand on that stage.
That was someone else's dream.
Someone more polished, more obedient,
someone who never raised their voice when told to smile.
But here I was.
My heels sank slightly into the worn wood beneath me.
My lungs held their breath,
and the lights above me weren't just bright —
they were interrogation lamps, searching for cracks in my composure.
I could feel a thousand eyes watching,
weighing me,
waiting for me to fall.
But I didn't.
Not because I was fearless —
because fear had already carved its place into my ribs,
and I had simply learned to live with it.
---
They said I was difficult.
That I didn't know how to follow the script.
That I didn't deserve a voice.
So I made one.
With every note I sang,
I stitched together the broken parts of myself.
Each lyric became a confession.
Each silence between verses — a scream I chose not to release.
---
He saw it before I did.
The spark beneath the defiance.
The music I was too scared to hear in my own heart.
He didn't try to change me.
He just stood there,
quietly, like a mirror,
until I saw myself clearly in his eyes.
---
But freedom…
freedom is a heavy thing.
It doesn't come with applause.
It comes with loneliness,
and sacrifice,
and the unbearable choice between your truth —
and their love.
I wanted both.
I wanted to sing and still be held.
To scream and still be seen.
But I learned something in the quiet of backstage air:
sometimes, choosing yourself feels like losing everything else.
---
And yet…
I stepped forward.
Into the light.
Into the music.
Into a world that didn't want me —
but could no longer ignore me.