In this reflection we acknowledge the small relief.
You sent the message. Then you waited. You told yourself you were not thinking about it while thinking about nothing else.
Your mind started writing stories. They are upset. They are pulling away. They saw it and chose not to respond. You scrolled back through old conversations looking for evidence of what you already decided was true.
Then the notification comes. A normal reply. Maybe even a warm one. The thing you were afraid of was never real. You exhale.
This happens more than you admit. The spiral between sending and receiving. The way your brain fills the silence with worst-case scenarios. The relief when the response finally arrives and none of your fears were accurate.
Anxious attachment does this. It reads delay as danger. It treats uncertainty as rejection. It cannot rest until it has confirmation that everything is okay, and even then, the rest only lasts until the next silence.
Some people would say just stop caring so much. As if caring is a dial you can turn down. As if the nervous system takes suggestions.
The waiting is hard. That is just true. It exposes how much you need something outside yourself to feel settled. How much your peace depends on another person's response time.
But the relief is also real. They texted back. The connection is still there. The story your brain invented was fiction. You can put down the weight you were carrying.
For now, that is enough. You do not have to solve the pattern tonight.
Just notice: they texted back. You can breathe again.