You Can’t Go Back the Same
I returned home expecting comfort, but found a version of myself that no longer lived there.
I didn’t expect it to feel like this.
I thought going back home
would feel like stepping into something warm,
something waiting;
like nothing had moved
since I left.
But the house looked smaller.
The road I used to run down
as a child
felt shorter,
quieter,
like it had forgotten my footsteps.
Even the air felt very different;
familiar,
but distant,
like it knew me
but wasn’t sure from where.
My mother called my name
the same way she always did,
but something in me paused
before answering.
Not because I didn’t recognize it;
but because I did.
Too well.
And that’s when it hit me.
Home had not changed.
I had.
The room was still there;
the same walls,
the same window,
the same place I once sat
dreaming of leaving.
But I couldn’t find that version of me
anywhere inside it.
I opened drawers
as if I had misplaced myself.
I looked at old photos
like they belonged
to someone I used to know.
And maybe they did.
Because what returns
is never just a place.
It’s the memory of who you were
when you last belonged there.
And standing in that house,
with everything right where it should be,
I realized something quietly unsettling;
You can go back to a place,
but you can’t go back
as the same person.
Some things welcome you back.
Others simply remind you
that you’ve already left.
About the Creator
Lori A. A.
Writer, Teacher exploring identity, human behavior, and life between cultures.


Comments (1)
So true. The past us is so different from the present us. Loved your poem!