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BlogLeisure

Unsent and Unforgotten

Unsent and Unforgotten

Authored by Shambhavi, Batch of 2028

Design by Dishita Grover, Batch of 2028

Not all love is loud. Some love lives in whispers—pressed between the folds of old letters, sealed inside envelopes that never found an address, scribbled in the margins of forgotten notebooks.

These are the letters we wrote when speaking felt burdensome, when the heart was overflowing, or when silence seemed safer than the truth.

There were words. They were meant to heal, confess, say goodbye—or sometimes, just be written, even if never read. Some were held back by fear, some by pride, and some by the simple ache of knowing that not all love is meant to be received. But even if they never reached the hands they were written for, these letters exist. They carry the weight of hearts that dared to feel deeply, even if they couldn’t speak it out loud. They are unread, yet unforgettable. 

What were some of these letters, I quite wonder sometimes.

The Letter That Confessed Too Late

There was a moment—perhaps years ago, perhaps just last night—when someone sat down to write a letter. Their heart overflowed with love so intense they couldn’t contain it. The words poured onto the page effortlessly—memories of laughter tangled in little mistakes, the way their presence made the world feel lighter, and quiet glances that spoke louder than entire conversations

“I think I love you.”

It was meant to be a simple note, written in the margins of a book they borrowed, folded into a napkin after a friendly dinner, left on their desk after years of shared glances and lingering goodbyes.

It wasn’t always grand love—it could’ve been the slow kind, the kind that crept in unnoticed between library shelves, late-night campus walks, or inside jokes that only they understood.

But it never left their hands. 

Maybe because they were afraid of changing what was already there.
Maybe because they saw them fall for someone else.
Maybe because they thought there would be more time.

The letter stayed hidden, but the love never faded. It lingered in those unfinished sentences, in those almost, in the what-ifs.

And so, the letter remained—folded away, a secret between the writer and the paper, a love unspoken but never forgotten, a friendship ever cherished but never spoken for. Friendships can be lost in silence. Words unsaid can build walls just as high as the ones we say carelessly.
Maybe one day, they will write again.
Or maybe, this letter will always be the reminder of a bond left in the past.

The Letter of Apology That Came Too Late

Another letter sits, carefully written, each word chosen with precision and regret. It carries an apology—one that should have been spoken, one that might have stitched a wound before it turned into a scar.

“I’m sorry,” it begins. “For the things I said, for the things I didn’t say. For the way I hurt you without realising I was holding the knife.”

But this letter was never delivered. 

Maybe the writer was ashamed.
Maybe they believed time had already done its work, smoothing over the cracks, making the pain easier to forget.
Maybe they feared that even an apology wouldn’t be enough, that the damage had already settled profoundly into the space between them.

These apologies were meant for the people we loved—the parents we misunderstood, the siblings we fought with, and the childhood friendships we outgrew inopportune. They were meant for the ones who shaped us, who stood beside us even when we failed to see it, who loved us in ways we only learned to appreciate when time had already slipped too far from our grasp.

“I never meant to push you away,” one such letter confesses. “I thought I had to prove myself, that I had to stand on my own. But I wish I had reached for you instead. I hope, in the quiet moments, you knew I loved you—even when I never found the words to say it.”

And so, the letter remains—a quiet weight in the hands of the writer, a whisper of regret, a testimony to the way love is sometimes felt more in the spaces between words than in the words themselves.

The Letter That Was Meant to Say Goodbye

“I miss us.”

There wasn’t a fight, just distance—the kind that sneaks in through busy schedules, unanswered messages, and the assumption that ‘we’ll catch up soon.’ One day, they realized they didn’t know the latest stories in each other’s lives. That the person who once knew their coffee order, their fears, and their wildest dreams, had become a name they scrolled past on social media.

The letter was written with hesitation, unsure if it would be welcome, unsure if the friendship could still be salvaged.

It was never sent.

Because sometimes, we mourn people who are still alive.

“I wish I had more time.”

Some letters are written to the stars, wind, and spaces where someone used to be.

A best friend—someone who left before they could say everything they needed to. The ink is smudged with tears, and the words come slowly, haltingly, as the writer struggles to fit a lifetime of emotions into a single page. 

How do you say thank you, I miss you, and I’m sorry all at once? How do you write to someone who will never read your words? How do you tell them they were your soulmate long before you even understood what that meant?

Maybe they write it every year on their birthday, a quiet ritual of remembrance. Maybe they keep it tucked in an old photo album, pressed between memories that still feel sacred to touch. Maybe they fold it carefully and let the ocean take it, hoping that somehow, somewhere, in some way beyond understanding—it will reach them.

The Letters That Live On

Sometimes, love lingers quietly in ink, surviving in the spaces we once believed we had outgrown. Some letters stay hidden, waiting for courage that may never come. Others are revisited on quiet nights, a silent reminder that love—whether spoken or not—was real. And some are lost between the pages of forgotten journals, their ink faded but never meaningless.

But they do not vanish.

Because love, in all its forms, lingers. It exists in the hesitation before dialling an old number, in the way a familiar scent stirs a memory, in the songs that still echo a name we no longer say.

These letters live on—not just in paper and ink, but in us.
A letter to the past self who loved fearlessly.
A letter to the present self still learning how to.
A letter to the future self, who, hopefully, will have no more words left unsaid.

Because some words are meant to be etched by the ink on the paper—unspoken, unread—and that’s okay.