When Silence Heals: What Meditation Taught Me About Myself

For a while, I felt overwhelmed by everything—grief, routine, the endless to-do lists. After losing my mother, life became hazy, like I was moving through fog. I kept showing up, doing my best, pushing forward. But deep down, I wasn’t really connected with myself.

I kept reading books and listening to podcasts that spoke about the importance of “sitting with yourself.” And at first, I thought—well, I am with myself all the time. What more could there be?

But the truth is, we often confuse proximity with presence. Just like we sometimes recite the ‘Father thou art in heaven’ prayer by habit, forgetting we’re actually speaking to the divine—the One who gave us life—so too do we forget what it means to truly be with ourselves.

“Sitting with yourself” isn’t just being alone. It’s about stillness. Not thinking. Not doing. Just listening. Letting the body speak. It always does—through fatigue, tension, even pain. But the noise of the world can be so loud that we stop hearing it.

Meditation became my doorway back to presence. Through it, I learned to pause, to listen—not just with my ears, but with my heart, my body, my soul. And what I discovered was that I was deeply tired. My body had been whispering it, even screaming it, through pain and illness. I’d heal one thing, only for something else to flare up.

Why? Because I hadn’t really listened. I was ignoring the lesson.

Unfelt emotions, unhealed wounds—they don’t just disappear. They live in the body. In tight shoulders, in headaches, in tension that refuses to leave. Sometimes, they even show up as physical swelling. Your system is always trying to tell you something: you need to feel this.

During meditation, I began to visualize those wounded parts of myself. And let me be honest—it hurt. Healing does. Old pain surfaced in waves, each one timed perfectly by my body, as if it knew I was finally ready to feel it.

That’s the truth about healing: you don’t get to choose only the light. You must walk through the heavy, uncomfortable parts, too. And if you don’t feel them willingly, life has a way of bringing them back to you—through people, through experiences that mirror the original wound.

It’s all chemistry. Emotional alchemy. What we suppress internally finds its way out externally, until we listen.

That’s why it’s so important to stay attuned to your body and heart. This inner relationship—the one we never learned in school—is essential. Getting to know yourself. Understanding your mind. Hearing your soul.

One moment that surprised me deeply was when, during meditation, I began to cry—unexpectedly, uncontrollably. It was like a river rising from within, and I finally let it wash over me. It made me realize: grief needs space. And tears are not a weakness; they’re truth. They’re healing.

Still, society teaches us to hide our sadness. To hush our tears. We’re told to stay strong, to keep going. But true strength is in allowing yourself to feel. To cry when your soul needs release. To stop patching wounds with productivity and just be.

Because in this life, we’re meant to experience. To feel. And yes, sometimes, to cry.

Your soul always knows what it needs to let go, to cleanse, to evolve. Crying is the body’s way of purifying itself. It’s not shameful—it’s sacred.

Toward the end of my meditation, I saw my mother’s smile with the eyes of my soul. It wasn’t a vision, not exactly—it was a knowing. A sense of peace. I understood, in that moment, that she was okay. That she had found her rest.

And that kind of knowing… it doesn’t come instantly. It comes slowly, with time. With love. With presence. And most of all, with the courage to sit with yourself—and listen.

Processing…

It’s been a couple of weeks since you left.
And the truth is — I’ve been lying to myself.

I cry quietly, while trying not to cry at all.
I long for you, yet whisper to myself,
“Let her go… Let her fly.”
It’s a contradiction I carry in my chest like a fragile flame — flickering between aching and acceptance.

This feeling… I can’t name it.
Neither my heart nor my body knows what to do with it.
How do you begin to move forward after losing your world?
How do you unlearn the comfort of your mother’s presence?
There’s no map for this place. No guidebook.
And no heartbreak before has ever come close to this kind of hollow.

So my body took over.
It spoke in the only language it knew: pain.
A terrible cold. A herniated disk. Inflammation blooming from the silence I’ve been trying to contain.
I’ve been poked and scanned, tested and told — “You need to calm down.”
As if grief ever listens to such simple instructions.

I try. God knows I try.
Some days I breathe deeply. Other days, I just try to survive.
I’ve started to ease off the medication —
not because I’m better, but because I want to believe I can be.

I’ve noticed that when I stop spiraling, when I let myself breathe,
when I allow the sun to touch my skin and the wind to brush through my hair —
things soften. Even just for a moment.

But when I take on too much —
grief, fear, guilt, memory —
my body cries for me.
And I begin to understand…
this isn’t just about staying strong.
It’s about choosing life, again and again, even when it hurts.

At night, the silence stretches.
I stay up late, whispering “I’m alright” into the dark,
even when I know I’m not.
You’re harder to see than most, Mom.
But I still search for your face in dreams that don’t always come.

And yet… you are still my most cherished memory.

I haven’t found the courage to listen to our songs.
They’re too full of you —
your laughter, your warmth, your light.
The melodies might shatter me.
So I keep them tucked away, like unopened letters I’m not ready to read.

And so, I begin again. Slowly.
One deep breath at a time.
A walk through the trees.
A moment of soft laughter — not quite real yet,
but close enough to remind me what life used to feel like.

I’m learning how to live without you.
I hate that sentence.
But I whisper it anyway, with trembling lips.

Still, the questions echo inside me:
How do I love again?
How do I trust again?

I don’t know the answers yet.
But I’m listening for them.
And maybe someday, they’ll come like you used to —
quietly, gently, without warning.

So if you’re watching me from wherever you are,
please know I’m not pushing you away.
I’m just… finding my way back.
Learning how to walk again with this invisible weight.
Learning how to carry you with me, not behind me.
I’m not lost, just… healing.

And I love you —
always.