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Losing your oldest and dearest bestie to addiction, the broken empty grief |
| For James They say addiction is a thief, but they don’t tell you how quiet it can be. It didn’t kick the door in. It didn’t shatter windows. It just sat beside you, James, whispering comfort that came with chains. You were laughter that filled rooms, the kind that made strangers turn just to feel part of it. My bestie. My person in the chaos. I remember the way you’d say my name— like it meant something solid. Like I was home. And then the slow fade began. Missed calls. Hollow eyes. Promises that trembled before they broke. I tried to love you louder than it. Tried to be stronger than the pull. But addiction doesn’t fight fair— it rewires hope, makes poison feel like relief. The hardest part? You were still you somewhere in there. Still kind. Still funny. Still my James. But the tide kept dragging you farther from shore, and I stood there screaming into a storm that wouldn’t answer back. Now I carry you in stories and songs, in the quiet moments when the world feels too heavy. Grief is love with nowhere to go. So I send it to you— past the ache, past the anger, past the what-ifs. I hope wherever you are, your hands are steady. Your mind is clear. Your heart is finally at peace. And if love can cross whatever distance this is— know this: You were never just another loss. You were my best friend. And I will miss you for the rest of my life. |