When doing everything right feels wrong.
I used to love checklists.
I loved the certainty of them.
The way a tick could turn effort into proof.
I’d been trained for this long before spreadsheets, learning silence as a performer.
Master’s degree: done.
Job title: presentable.
Promotion: done.
Visas in different countries: approved.
LinkedIn summary: glowing.
On paper, I was doing everything right.
From the outside, it looked like I’d accomplished life.
Left home. Became an expat.
The kind of story that photographs well.
When I briefly went back, I carried that overseas glow.
Proof that leaving worked.
At home, people asked the same questions in different fonts:
Are you settled yet?
When are you coming back for good?
So… what’s next?
I smiled through all of it.
Nodded like someone with a plan.
Inside, I couldn’t tell if I was ahead
or just very far away from myself.
I remember when the California visa arrived.
That gold-star moment.
The thick envelope.
The official seal.
My name printed cleanly, unmistakably approved.
I didn’t breathe it in.
I didn’t call a friend.
I didn’t let my body register what had just happened.
I opened a new spreadsheet.
Things to close.
Things to pack.
Things to optimise.
No joy.
No pause.
Just momentum to conceal the numbness.
The checklist never ran out.
I was so busy collecting gold stars
I forgot to check if I wanted them.
I wasn’t chasing a life.
I was chasing the safety of being correct.
So I started crossing off things
that were never mine to carry.
Other people’s timelines.
Inherited definitions of “making it.”
The need to be easily understood at a dinner party.
Now, the markers are quieter.
Am I breathing fully?
Do I feel present in my body?
Does this choice bring me closer to myself
or further away?
It’s messier.
It doesn’t photograph well.
It’s a terrible LinkedIn update.
But it’s mine.

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