Most of the time, she’s fine. That’s what everyone sees. She takes her days with a practiced smile, answers questions with steady confidence, keeps the wheels turning and the plates spinning. She shows up. She handles things. She moves through responsibilities like a dancer in lights — graceful, capable, even when the music feels too loud. From the outside, it looks effortless. She has learned how to carry weight without letting it show, how to soften her exhaustion into composure, how to tuck her worries neatly behind productivity.
She spins to the sound because stopping isn’t always an option. There are schedules to keep, people to love, fires to put out, expectations to meet. She has become fluent in strength. Fluent in resilience. Fluent in saying, “I’m okay,” even when okay feels fragile. She has mastered the art of being the steady one — the safe one — the one others lean on.
But sometimes she falls down.
Not dramatically. Not always where people can see. Sometimes it happens in the quiet of her own thoughts. Sometimes it’s in the car after holding it together all day. Sometimes it’s in the middle of the night when the world is silent and the weight she carries gets louder. Sometimes it’s just a heaviness in her chest that she can’t quite explain — the accumulation of being strong for too long.
She doesn’t always need someone to fix it. She doesn’t need advice or solutions or a list of what she should be grateful for. What she longs for — what she quietly aches for — is for someone to look at her and see past the capable exterior. To notice that strength can be tiring. That the dancer sometimes needs to stop spinning.
She wants someone to say, “Breathe. Just breathe.”
Not in a dismissive way. Not in a rushed way. But in a way that means, I see you. I see how much you’re holding. I see how hard you’re trying. I see how you carry everyone else. Now let me carry you for a moment.
Take the world off your shoulders and put it on me.
Those words would undo her in the best way. Because she has grown so used to being the strong one that she sometimes forgets she is allowed to rest. She has grown so accustomed to solving problems that she forgets she is allowed to simply feel them. To be held instead of holding. To exhale instead of bracing.
Breathe, just breathe.
Let the life that you live be all that you need.
There is something profoundly healing about being told you don’t have to earn your rest. That you don’t have to prove your worth through endurance. That you don’t have to hold everything together to be loved. She needs someone to remind her that her value is not in her productivity, her strength, or her ability to manage chaos — but simply in her being.
She wants to be known as more than “fine.” More than “strong.” More than “she’s got it.” She wants someone to see the moments when her smile costs more than it shows. Someone who understands that resilience does not mean invincibility. Someone who can sense when the music has become too loud and gently pull her off the stage.
Most days she is capable. She is steady. She is brave. But bravery does not cancel vulnerability. It coexists with it. And in those vulnerable spaces, she longs for gentleness. For someone who will sit beside her and say, “You don’t have to carry this alone.”
Because the truth is, she doesn’t want to stop being strong. She just doesn’t want to be strong by herself.
She wants partnership. She wants presence. She wants a voice that cuts through the noise and reminds her that she is allowed to be human. That she can lay down her armor without losing respect. That she can cry without being weak. That she can say, “This is heavy,” and have someone answer, “Then let me help.”
When someone says, “Take the world off your shoulders and put it on me,” it doesn’t mean she disappears. It means she is supported. It means the weight is shared. It means the dancer doesn’t have to spin alone in the spotlight.
And maybe the most powerful words of all are the simplest: Just breathe.
Because sometimes breathing is the bravest thing she can do. Not planning. Not fixing. Not pushing through. Just breathing. Letting the moment exist without trying to conquer it. Letting herself be enough without doing more.
She is fine, most of the time. But she is also tired sometimes. Tender sometimes. Overwhelmed sometimes. And what she longs for isn’t someone to rescue her — it’s someone to recognize her.
To see the strength and still offer softness.
To see the composure and still offer comfort.
To see the dancer and still say, “You can stop now. I’ve got you.”
And maybe one day, when the music slows and the lights dim, she’ll finally hear those words spoken gently over her weary heart:
Breathe. Just breathe.
Take the world off your shoulders.
Put it on me.
And for the first time in a long time, she will.