
Id go for the first prompt question as the 2nd one was a little too deep. So for me something life kinda forced me to let go will be my childhood, it had this innocence to it, that you do not truly appreciate until it disappears, and im glad that i spent my childhood in that innocence as some children were forced to grow up too fast and for that im everly grateful . Back then, happiness could come from the smallest things, watching cartoons on a quiet afternoon, laughing too hard with friends over absolutely nothing, falling asleep without worrying about tomorrow or the problems that will come from it, adults had all the answers and that life somehow always worked itself out in the end. Everything felt protected and even things i considered to be problems some how always worked themselves out problems felt temporary because, somehow, there was always someone older, wiser, or stronger standing between you and the harshness of the world.
I think what I clung to most was not just childhood itself but the comfort that came with it. The freedom of existing without constantly worrying about money and responsibility, failure. Funny thing is as a child you imagine adulthood as freedom. You think growing up means doing whatever you want, staying up whenever you want, buying what you want. Lol!!. Nobody really explains that adulthood replaces childhood rules with heavier things.
It even about how suddenly maturity arrived. No moment where someone sits you down and prepares you for how exhausting life can become. One day you are simply existing, and the next, life starts hitting you with responsibilities faster than you can process them. It felt like walking confidently into what looked like an open road only to smash directly into a brick wall you never saw coming.
Nobody prepares you for realizing that adults are also confused people pretending to have things figured out and always putting on a smile, so as to protect that innocence, that you cherish. Nobody prepares you for watching friendships slowly fade because everyone is struggling with survival in different ways. Nobody prepares you for the pressure of trying to build a future while still emotionally feeling like the same confused child inside and perhaps in tandem with the weeks prompt the hardest part is realizing that the innocence does not slowly leave, life forces it out of you. Every disappointment, every responsibility added even to yourself, chips away at that softer version of yourself. You stop seeing the world through wonder and start seeing it through caution. You begin calculating everything. You overthink and are much more cautious.
I think that is why many adults secretly miss childhood so deeply, it is not that life was perfect back then, but it just felt lighter. At the same time, growing up teaches you things childhood never could. You begin to value peace more deeply, some how you want to be alone more and you appreciate genuine people more. You discover parts of yourself that comfort never would have revealed. In a strange way, adulthood breaks you a little, but it also builds you. Its a give and take relationship.


