Sometimes it’s not sadness.
Not anxiety.
Not even confusion.
It’s just the feeling that you’re slightly off from who you usually are.
Your reactions don’t line up.
Your thoughts feel borrowed.
Even your own voice sounds unfamiliar.
In moments like that, writing can feel pointless.
If you don’t recognize yourself, what’s there to write from?
Some people write anyway.
Not to find themselves again.
Not to get back to normal.
Just to leave a trace of where they are right now.
Writing when you don’t feel like yourself doesn’t have to sound authentic.
It doesn’t need a clear tone.
It doesn’t need to reflect who you “really are.”
You can write as someone you don’t fully recognize.
You can write in fragments that feel out of character.
You can contradict things you’ve written before.
None of that means you’ve lost yourself.
It just means the version of you on the page hasn’t settled yet.
This kind of writing doesn’t reconnect anything.
It doesn’t restore a sense of identity.
It simply lets the page hold the gap
between who you were
and whoever hasn’t arrived yet.