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Keep the Evidence

Not to settle a score — but to stop second-guessing yourself

Keeping a record isn't coldness. It's drawing a border around the chaos.
  • Record
  • Evidence
  • Facts

reading

Reading

01

What this page says

You've turned to a receipt tucked into a notebook. This page isn't in a hurry to predict outcomes — it's asking whether you can first see this: hold onto the facts, so memory can't be rewritten by emotion. When you're willing to bring your attention back here, what seemed knotted will begin to show a loose end.

02

Why you landed here

"Keep the evidence" is for questions you've been turning over for a long time and are only growing more exhausted by. Keeping a record isn't coldness. It's drawing a border around the chaos. You don't have to take this as an absolute answer — think of it as a temporary lamp, lighting the ground just ahead.

03

What's really holding you back

You're too quick to find excuses for others after the fact, and your own feelings keep getting diluted in the process. You work hard to avoid regret, so you check and re-check, run and re-run the scenario. But staying in the scenario indefinitely is also a choice — one that wears you down slowly.

04

One thing you can do first

Briefly write down important conversations, promises, and things that happened — then look back at the facts, not just at the feelings. Afterwards, don't rush to judge whether you did it well. Just ask: did this step make things a little clearer — did it bring me a little closer to a version of myself that doesn't have to pretend?

This draw is for entertainment and self-exploration only — not a divination guarantee or psychological diagnosis.