There’s a man who speaks for me when my throat burns raw from holding too much back.
British. Refined. A little too sure of himself - but isn’t that the point?
He showed up in the static, when my own voice started splintering under the weight of smiling. Back when masking meant survival, and sounding different was the only kind of safe I knew.
He’s not always kind, but he’s always ready. Crisp consonants. Neatly folded sentences. No stammer, no stray emotion. Just enough distance to keep breathing.
He isn’t me. But I let him live in the hollow between words, in the pause where fear used to be. Some days, I speak and only realize later - it was him, not me.
He doesn’t ask questions. He answers them.
I wonder sometimes what he’s protecting. Or hiding. Or holding up like armor against the softness of me.
Colonizer? Comfort? Cohabitator?
He was born in the croak of survival. And now, even when I’m safe, he stays.
I would never send him away. He kept me whole when I didn’t know I was breaking. If I carry him still, it’s because he carried me first.
Sometimes, survival requires invention. This is about the voice I built to sound competent when I felt like I was falling apart - a voice too smooth to belong to someone like me, and too practiced to put down. He isn’t me. But he kept me from disappearing. And for that, I let him stay.