@phulk55:

✨PF💫@titan terror
✨PF💫@titan terror
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Friday 15 November 2024 21:44:22 GMT
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Gojo stands quietly for a moment, as if he’s seen this truth too many times to be surprised by it anymore. “So many broken children living in grown bodies, mimicking adult lives…” He’s not talking about weakness. He’s talking about what people become when time moves forward but healing never happens. People grow taller. Their voices deepen. Their faces harden into something society calls “mature.” They learn how to pay bills, how to work, how to smile at the right moments, how to act like everything is under control. From the outside, it looks like progress. It looks like adulthood. But Gojo knows better. Because behind that performance, he sees it clearly—children who never got the chance to finish being children. Some of them learned too early that comfort doesn’t last. Some learned that trust gets punished. Others learned to stay quiet because no one listened anyway. So they adapted. Not by healing, but by hiding. Not by understanding their pain, but by building a life on top of it and hoping it stays buried. And the strange part? It works. For a while. They become functional. Responsible. Even admired. But inside, there’s still that younger version of themselves sitting in silence—waiting for something they never received. An apology. Protection. Guidance. Love that didn’t come with conditions. Gojo exhales, almost like he’s amused at how fragile “adulthood” really is. Because he knows strength isn’t just power, or control, or status. Real strength would be facing that child inside without turning away. Without drowning it in distractions. Without pretending it’s gone just because life kept moving. But most people don’t do that. They just keep going. They mimic adulthood the way actors mimic roles on a stage—convincing enough to fool everyone, sometimes even themselves. And the longer it continues, the more normal it feels… until they forget there was ever anything else they could have been. Gojo’s voice turns quieter now, more serious. “People think growing up means becoming someone new. But most never grow out of who they were forced to become.” And in a world like that, the real tragedy isn’t brokenness. It’s how well people learn to live without ever fixing it. #jjk #animefyp #relateable #quotes #xyzabc
Gojo stands quietly for a moment, as if he’s seen this truth too many times to be surprised by it anymore. “So many broken children living in grown bodies, mimicking adult lives…” He’s not talking about weakness. He’s talking about what people become when time moves forward but healing never happens. People grow taller. Their voices deepen. Their faces harden into something society calls “mature.” They learn how to pay bills, how to work, how to smile at the right moments, how to act like everything is under control. From the outside, it looks like progress. It looks like adulthood. But Gojo knows better. Because behind that performance, he sees it clearly—children who never got the chance to finish being children. Some of them learned too early that comfort doesn’t last. Some learned that trust gets punished. Others learned to stay quiet because no one listened anyway. So they adapted. Not by healing, but by hiding. Not by understanding their pain, but by building a life on top of it and hoping it stays buried. And the strange part? It works. For a while. They become functional. Responsible. Even admired. But inside, there’s still that younger version of themselves sitting in silence—waiting for something they never received. An apology. Protection. Guidance. Love that didn’t come with conditions. Gojo exhales, almost like he’s amused at how fragile “adulthood” really is. Because he knows strength isn’t just power, or control, or status. Real strength would be facing that child inside without turning away. Without drowning it in distractions. Without pretending it’s gone just because life kept moving. But most people don’t do that. They just keep going. They mimic adulthood the way actors mimic roles on a stage—convincing enough to fool everyone, sometimes even themselves. And the longer it continues, the more normal it feels… until they forget there was ever anything else they could have been. Gojo’s voice turns quieter now, more serious. “People think growing up means becoming someone new. But most never grow out of who they were forced to become.” And in a world like that, the real tragedy isn’t brokenness. It’s how well people learn to live without ever fixing it. #jjk #animefyp #relateable #quotes #xyzabc

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