Quote #96272
If you're gonna leave, I wish you'd just leave. Why do you keep coming back if you're not going to stay? Because even when you're gone, you're never really gone... I won't get over it if you keep coming back. Losing you once was hard enough. And now you're here again and everything's coming back. I'm going to get screwed. And I can't do it again.
Brodi Ashton
About This Quote
This quote needs no introduction—at least for now. We're working on adding more context soon.
Interpretation
The speaker pleads for emotional clarity: either a clean departure or a committed return. The repeated coming-and-going keeps grief perpetually “active,” preventing closure and reopening wounds that had begun to scar over. The line “even when you're gone, you're never really gone” captures how absence can remain psychologically present—through memory, hope, and unfinished conversations. The fear of being “screwed” signals self-awareness about vulnerability: the speaker anticipates being pulled back into attachment and pain. Overall, the quote dramatizes the cruelty of ambiguity in relationships, where intermittent presence can be more destabilizing than a definitive ending.




