The Things That Never Arrive

There are things you can want
with your whole body
and still never be chosen by.
This is not a failure of language
or posture
or faith.
This is not because you asked wrong
or waited poorly
or didn’t ache with enough discipline.
Some doors remain closed
because they are not doors.
They are walls
that look kind in certain light.
We are told wanting is a virtue—
that desire, if kept pure,
will be rewarded.
But want does not earn its place.
It does not vote.
It does not tip the scale
simply by being sincere.
I have wanted things
that would have ruined me.
I have wanted things
that would have saved me
and still never came.
The wanting felt the same in my chest—
that is the cruelty of it.
You learn this slowly:
hope does not guarantee arrival.
Prayer does not obligate heaven.
Love does not promise reciprocity.
And none of this means it was foolish
to kneel.
Some nights you realize
you are grieving something
that never existed,
except in the way your life bent around it.
You grieve the version of yourself
who would have lived there.
You grieve the rooms you furnished in advance.
The body remembers futures
the mind was never given.
The taste of tomatoes repulses me.
That sentence belongs nowhere,
which is why it belongs here.
Life continues its errands
while your private apocalypse
learns to sit quietly.
Acceptance does not arrive gently.
It does not knock.
It settles in like weather—
unasked,
inescapable,
indifferent to your readiness.
You stop bargaining first.
That is the beginning.
You stop saying if only
like it’s a spell.
You stop measuring your worth
by what did not stay.
This is not peace.
This is gravity.
You carry what didn’t come
the way others carry scars—
without explanation,
without apology,
without demanding that the world
make sense of it.
And somehow—
without resolution,
without replacement—
your life continues
not smaller,
but altered.
You do not get what you wanted.
You get what remains.
And what remains
still breathes.
Wanting something badly enough never earns its place.
About the Creator
Hannah Lambert
Hannah Lambert writes from the crossroads of faith, resilience, and lived experience. Her poems offer a soft place for hard truths and a lantern for anyone finding their way home.




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