Not everyone who enters your life stays, and that truth often arrives quietly rather than dramatically. People imagine endings as loud doors slamming shut, arguments that scorch the air, or final words spoken with certainty. In reality, most departures are subtle. They look like unanswered messages, postponed plans, growing distance, and the slow realization that someone who once felt permanent has become optional. Life introduces people to you in seasons, and many of them are only meant to walk alongside you for a short stretch of the road. That doesn’t mean they were meaningless; it means they served a purpose for who you were at the time. But somewhere along the way, you are asked to choose a chair. Not literally, but emotionally.
A place where you rest. A place where you sit when you are tired of proving yourself, explaining yourself, or performing strength. The chair you choose is not about comfort alone; it is about trust. It is about who you believe will still be there when the noise fades, when success no longer distracts you, when you are stripped down to your most honest self. The chair becomes a symbol of permanence in a world that rarely offers it.