Every relationship has a language.
Learn to speak it, protect it and refuse to walk away when it gets hard.
Who I am
I am The Grammar of Us.
I didn't set out to become someone who studies relationships. I became someone who had to — because one day I found myself holding the pieces of something I had given everything to, trying to understand how it had shattered.
What I discovered in the wreckage wasn't simple. It was layered. Outside forces I hadn't accounted for. Patterns of emotional and mental abuse I hadn't yet named. And a question that has stayed with me, that I couldn't stop turning over: why didn't the person I loved most fight for us?
I still don't have all the answers. But I've learned that the not-knowing — if you sit with it long enough, if you're willing to be honest with yourself about what you find — becomes its own kind of map.
The Grammar of Us is where I do that work out loud. It's built for anyone who is still in the thick of it. Still asking why. Still trying to make sense of a love that didn't hold the way it was supposed to. I'm not here to offer easy comfort or tidy conclusions. I'm here to ask the harder questions — about attachment, about manipulation, about what it means to give yourself fully to someone who was never quite present enough to receive it.
If you're piecing yourself back together and you don't yet know what the picture is supposed to look like — you're in the right place.