In our final year, I couldn't carry it anymore.
The weight of four years of silence had become unbearable. Every
day I woke up and carried this love like a secret stone in my
chest — heavy, constant, exhausting. I had watched her laugh with
other people and wondered if she would ever laugh that way because
of me. I had watched other guys look at her and felt a jealousy
I had no right to feel. I had spent four years being the perfect
friend, the reliable one, the one who was always there — and
somewhere along the way I had lost myself in it.
I couldn't do it anymore.
I made up my mind on a Tuesday morning. I was sitting in my room
staring at the ceiling when I decided that I would rather know the
truth and be free than spend another year carrying something that
was slowly crushing me. Whatever happened, I needed to say it out
loud. Not for her. For me.
I texted her and asked if she wanted to take a walk that evening.
She said yes immediately. She always said yes when it came to me.
That was the thing about Simi — she never made me feel invisible.
She just never saw me the way I saw her.
We met at our usual spot near the campus library. The old tree
with the wide branches that we had sat under a hundred times
before. The sun was going down and everything was painted in that
soft golden light that makes even ordinary moments feel significant.
She was already there when I arrived, sitting on the concrete
ledge, scrolling through her phone. She looked up when she heard
my footsteps and smiled — that easy, familiar smile that had been
the beginning and end of everything for me.
"Hey you," she said.
"Hey," I replied.
We sat together for a while in comfortable silence. That was
something I had always loved about us — we never needed to fill
every moment with words. The silence between us had always felt
safe. That evening it felt like the calm before a storm.
I stared straight ahead and took a slow breath.
"Simi," I said. "There is something I need to tell you."
She turned to look at me. Something in my voice must have told
her this was different from our usual conversations because her
expression shifted — still open, still warm, but more careful now.
"Okay," she said quietly. "I'm listening."
And then I told her everything.
My hands were shaking but my voice was steady — I made sure of
that. I told her that I had loved her since the first day of
college. That she had become the most important person in my
world. That every moment we spent together meant more to me than
she could possibly know. That I had tried to stop feeling this
way and couldn't. That I had tried to move on with someone else
and couldn't do that either.
I told her that I wasn't asking her to feel the same way. I
wasn't asking her to change anything between us. I just needed
her to know the truth because carrying it alone had become too
heavy.
When I finished speaking the silence stretched between us like
something fragile.
She didn't speak immediately. She looked down at her hands and I
watched her process everything I had just said. Every second of
that silence felt like an hour. My heart was hammering so loudly
I was certain she could hear it.
Then she looked up at me.
Her eyes were soft and full of something that looked like genuine
pain — not for herself but for me. That was the thing about Simi.
Even in that moment, her first instinct was to care about how I
was feeling.
"I don't feel that way about you," she said. "I'm sorry. I
really am."
No anger. No awkwardness. No cruel words. Just the quiet, honest
truth delivered as gently as she could manage.
And somehow that made it hurt more.
I had prepared myself for many responses. I had imagined
scenarios where she was angry, where she laughed, where she
pulled away immediately. I had not prepared myself for kindness.
Her gentleness cracked something open in me that her rejection
alone never could have.
"It's okay," I heard myself say. "I just needed you to know."
She reached over and squeezed my hand once. Brief. Warm. Final.
We sat there for a little while longer, watching the last of the
sunlight disappear behind the buildings. Then we walked back to
the hostel together, talking about small things — an assignment
due the next day, a friend's birthday that weekend. Normal things.
Ordinary things.
As if the world hadn't just shifted completely on its axis.
I said goodnight at her door and walked to my room alone.
I sat on the edge of my bed in the dark for a long time.
There was no villain in our story. Simi hadn't led me on. She
hadn't made promises she couldn't keep. She had simply been
herself — warm, kind, and genuine — and I had loved her for it.
She couldn't help that her heart didn't beat for me the way mine
did for her.
I understood all of that.
But understanding something and not being hurt by it are two
very different things.
That night I allowed myself to feel everything I had been holding
back for four years. The grief. The disappointment. The exhaustion
of loving someone so completely and having nowhere to put all of
that love.
I didn't sleep much that night.
But when morning came I got up, got dressed, and kept going.
Because that is what you do.
You feel it. You sit with it. And then you keep going.
The days after were the hardest.
I avoided the library. I took different routes across campus. I
kept my phone face down so I wouldn't see her name and feel that
complicated mixture of joy and ache that came with it.
She texted me three days later. Just a simple message — "Are you
okay?"
I stared at that message for twenty minutes before typing back,
"I'm fine. Just busy."
I wasn't fine. I was completely falling apart in the quietest way
possible. The kind of falling apart that nobody notices because
you still show up to class, still laugh at the right moments,
still function like a person whose world hasn't just been
rearranged.
Grief is strange when there is nothing to grieve. We were never
together. Nothing was lost that was ever officially mine. And yet
it felt like loss. Deep, real, undeniable loss.
I grieved a relationship that existed only in my heart.
And somehow that made it lonelier than anything else.