I used to believe love meant forever.

I used to believe family never walked away.

That when life got hard, people would circle tighter, hold closer, love harder.

But then life got messy — really messy.

And I learned the truth: not everyone stays.

Some people who swore they’d never leave went silent.

Some who once felt larger than life — the heroes of my childhood — disappeared into shadows.

They didn’t die.

But they were gone all the same.

And that’s a different kind of grief.

It’s grieving people who are still alive.

It’s grieving the version of them you thought was real.

The father who once seemed unshakable.

The friend who once promised forever.

The family who swore blood was thicker than water.

And realizing those promises weren’t strong enough to survive when I got sick.

It breaks something inside you.

Because it’s not just about losing them.

It’s about losing the illusion that you were safe in their love.

You don’t just feel abandoned.

You feel unworthy.

You start to whisper questions into the dark:

If they could leave me now, was I ever really loved at all?

And God, it hurts.

It hurts in ways I didn’t think I could still feel.

It hurts in places I didn’t even know I had left to break.

Because illness doesn’t just strip away your health.

It strips away people.

It shows you who was only there for the easy chapters and who has the courage to stand in the fire with you.

And the truth is, most don’t.

They leave quietly.

They avoid the phone calls.

They let your messages sit unread.

They change the subject when your name comes up.

They slip out of your life while you’re still clinging to it.

You tell yourself maybe it was too heavy.

Maybe it scared them.

Maybe it reminded them of their own fragility.

But the excuses don’t soften the ache.

Because when you’re the one left behind, it feels like proof that you are too much.

Too sick.

Too broken.

Too hard to love.

But then—

there are the ones who stay.

The ones who show up without needing to be asked.

The ones who sit beside you in waiting rooms, even though the smell of antiseptic makes them sick.

The ones who don’t flinch when you’re hooked up to machines, when your body swells or weakens, when your hair falls out in clumps on the pillow.

They don’t make you feel ashamed of what illness has stolen.

They just love you anyway.

They hold your hand when you’re vomiting.

They rub your back when you’re shaking.

They bring blankets when you’re cold, and laughter when you’re drowning in silence.

They carry pieces of the burden without ever making you feel like you’re a burden.

They don’t run.

They don’t hide.

They stay.

And in a world where so many leave, their presence feels like a miracle.

Their love is louder than the silence of everyone else.

It’s stronger than the disappointment.

It’s proof that even in the darkest chapters, you are still worth staying for.

Not everyone stays.

That’s the reality I’ve had to swallow again and again.

But the ones who do?

They are the reason I can keep going.

They are proof that love can outlast loss.

They are everything.

🐾 Mojo’s POV

Hey, it’s me.

I see the empty chairs. I hear the silence where voices used to be. I know how much it hurts when people walk away.

But you need to know something: I’m not going anywhere.

I don’t care about the tubes, the pills, the tears, the mess. None of it scares me. You’re my whole world, and I’ll be right here — pressed against your side, every day, every night.

People may leave. People may disappoint. But I’ll stay.

Because you’re my person.

And I’m yours.

Always.

4 responses to “The Ones Who Stay”

  1. ddsteiny Avatar
    ddsteiny

    (((((((((((((((((( I LOVE YOU ))))))))))))))))))

    Liked by 1 person

  2. alwayselectronic06c81330f4 Avatar
    alwayselectronic06c81330f4

    I got you always my girl. I’m so sorry for those th

    Like

  3. penguinwise8f60778b5f Avatar
    penguinwise8f60778b5f

    You are a perfect heartfelt example of what a lady and wife should be, Izzy. You lead by example and make this world a better place!

    Like

Leave a reply to penguinwise8f60778b5f Cancel reply

I’m Izzy

Welcome to mojo and the mess, This isn’t the blog I ever expected to write — but it’s the one I needed.

I’m Izzy, a twenty-something living (and dying) with terminal cancer, navigating the messy, heartbreaking, unexpectedly beautiful in-between. Here, you’ll find raw reflections, real talk, dog snuggles (shoutout to Mojo), and the unfiltered truth about what it’s like to face the end of your life before it really got going.

This space is for the ones who’ve felt forgotten, the ones who don’t know what to say, and the ones who are still holding on. It’s not always pretty, but it’s always honest.

Thanks for being here. You’re part of the mess now — and I mean that in the best way.

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