
Some days my pain whispers, and I can almost pretend it isn’t there.
And then there are days like today, when it doesn’t whisper at all — it roars.
Pain takes up space no one else can see. It fills my body like smoke in a room, pressing against every corner until there’s no air left for anything else. Conversations feel far away. Laughter feels impossible. Even my own thoughts get drowned out by the sharp, steady hum of it.
It’s not just the physical ache, though that alone is enough to bring me to my knees. It’s the way pain steals pieces of my life without asking. Plans get canceled. Smiles fade too quickly. Patience evaporates. Suddenly, I’m not myself — I’m just a body fighting itself, hour by hour.
And the ugliest part? Most people never see it. I’ve become skilled at disguising the winces, at laughing through the spasms, at nodding while my insides are screaming. They tell me I look good. They say I’m strong. Meanwhile, I’m sitting here bargaining with my own bones, my own nerves, my own skin: please, just let me have one hour without hurting.
Living with pain this loud makes the world small. The future shrinks to minutes and moments. I stop thinking about next week, next month, next year — because all I can think about is the next wave, the next flare, the next fight my body will put me through.
I don’t want to inspire anyone with this truth. I don’t want to be applauded for surviving it. I just want to be honest: strength doesn’t always look like standing tall. Sometimes it looks like lying still, tears slipping down your face, doing absolutely nothing except enduring.
And if you’re in pain too — if your body has turned against you, if your days are measured in how much you hurt instead of how much you live — I want you to know you’re not alone in this. I hear you. I see you. I’m sitting with you in the roar.
I Hear the Hurt, Even When No One Else Does
(Mojo POV)
My human is really good at hiding things. She laughs when she’s hurting. She nods when people ask how she’s doing. She says “I’m fine” even when I can smell the truth on her skin.
But I know. I always know.
I hear the way her breathing changes when pain shows up. I see the way her hands shake just a little when she reaches for me. I feel the heaviness in the way she lays down, slower than before, as if even gravity is too much.
Other people don’t notice. They believe the smile. They hear the words. But I don’t need words. I just stay close. Sometimes that means pressing my warm body against hers until she finally sighs. Sometimes it means resting my chin on her leg, even if she’s too tired to pet me back. Sometimes it’s just keeping watch, making sure she knows she’s not alone in the fight.
I can’t take her pain away. Believe me, if I could bite it, growl at it, or chase it off like the mailman, I would. But I can do this: I can be here. I can love her when she’s laughing, and love her just as much when she’s curled up in silence.
Because when the pain is the loudest voice in the room, mine doesn’t need to be. She just needs to feel me breathing beside her, steady and sure, reminding her she’s not carrying this alone.
✨ If either of these voices spoke to you — the one hurting, or the one loving through the hurt — you’re not alone. Subscribe, share, or simply sit with these words a while. Sometimes company is the only medicine.





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