There’s a quiet assumption that when someone remains single for a long stretch of time, it must mean something is closed off—too guarded, too rigid, too unrealistic. In my experience, the opposite is often true. Time spent alone doesn’t harden you. It clarifies you. When you’ve learned what genuine peace feels like, you stop inviting misalignment simply to prove that you’re open.
Discernment isn’t about perfection or fear. It’s about self-trust. I can recognize fairly quickly when something aligns—and when it doesn’t. That doesn’t mean I’m unwilling to grow or change. It means I’m no longer interested in compromising core values in order to maintain proximity. One of those values is communication. Not perfection, not eloquence—just the ability, or willingness, to use words clearly and honestly.
Research consistently shows that clear communication—not ambiguity—is one of the strongest predictors of relational health.
If someone struggles to express interest, I don’t interpret that as mystery or something to be decoded. I take it at face value. Communication isn’t a preference; it’s a prerequisite. And choosing not to invest in what lacks clarity isn’t playing hard to get—it’s honoring the standard that peace has set.
If you’re in a season of stillness, by choice or by circumstance, let it be enough. You don’t owe urgency to anyone. You don’t need to dilute your values to remain desirable. Clarity doesn’t make you difficult; it makes you honest. And peace, once learned, is worth protecting.
Kendra Trammel is a writer and brand steward documenting moments of recognition, pattern, and grounding clarity as they emerge.
