There’s a particular kind of loneliness that arrives after midnight. It’s not about being physically alone; it’s the moment the world’s noise fades, and the internal gavel bangs. The trial begins.
My mind becomes a courtroom.
This isn’t a metaphor I chose lightly. It’s the exact architecture of the hours between dusk and dawn. The prosecution is relentless, presenting evidence from years ago with perfect, painful clarity. Every memory is questioned. A casual comment from 2018 is replayed, its tone analyzed for hidden malice. Every mistake is put on trial, sentenced not to prison but to an endless loop of “what if.”
And the jury? They’re phantoms. I find myself overthinking things that never mattered to people who never stayed. I’m defending my past actions to an audience that left the theater long ago, performing for empty seats that still somehow hold judgment.
The evidence is often silent.
In the quiet, absence becomes loud. A text unanswered, a conversation ended too soon, a space where words should be. I create problems out of silence because silence never explains itself. It’s a blank canvas, and my anxiety is a reckless painter, filling it with monsters and worst-case scenarios. The silence could mean nothing. It could mean everything. The not-knowing is the cross-examination that never ends.
In this court, there is no recess. Sleep avoids me, slipping through the cracks in the blinds. Peace ignores me, a distant country with revoked visas. And my thoughts? They are a ceaseless, tireless attorney, asking questions with no answers. Why did you say that? What did they mean? How could you have been so naive? What happens now? On and on, echoing in the chamber of a skull that just wants to be quiet.
I’ve learned something through all these nightly sessions.
Overthinking isn’t thinking too much. That’s a misdiagnosis. It’s feeling too deeply in a world that feels too little. It’s the heart sending up frantic signals—waves of old hurt, present fear, and future dread—and the mind, trying to be a good ally, desperately tries to think its way out of the feeling. It builds cases, analyzes data, and seeks logic in the illogical landscape of emotion. It’s a futile attempt to solve a poem with a spreadsheet.
The gavel never truly falls. There’s no “case closed.” But sometimes, in the deepest part of the night, I can change the narrative. I can step down from the stand. I can dismiss the phantom jury. I can tell the prosecuting attorney in my head that the court is adjourned, just for now.
I can’t always stop the trial, but I’m learning to be a kinder judge. To offer myself the compassion I’d freely give a friend. To acknowledge the feeling without following the thought down its rabbit hole. To say, “We feel this deeply. That is not a flaw. The world may feel little, but we do not. And that is a kind of courage.”
The night court may reconvene. But I am more than the defendant. I am also the scribe, the witness, and the one who can, eventually, turn out the lights and declare a temporary peace.
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