~ by Elaine Cole Crombie
You never knew me
you who knew me so well
You who could trace my smile
on a pillow or in your mind
You who could identify my laughter
around the corner, up the stairs
You who could feel my warmth
on the coldest nights or hottest days
at your side
or a hundred miles away
You who could feel my soft breath
in whispers on your neck
the gentle caress of my hands,
the taunting kiss, the teasing walk
You who tasted the tears
that only you could bring
because you never knew me
you who knew me so well
The Significance of You Never Knew Me
Elaine Cole Crombie’s “You Never Knew Me” resonates deeply with my experience of being married for eleven years to someone who loved an idea of me, but never truly knew me. The poem articulates a painful paradox: intimacy without understanding, closeness without recognition. It names the quiet erosion that occurs when another person can map your habits, your laughter, your body, yet remain blind to your inner life.
Being unseen by someone who is supposed to know you intimately fractures the psyche in subtle but lasting ways. Over time, you begin to question your own reality: Am I difficult to know? Am I asking for too much? Is my interior life irrelevant? The poem’s repetition of “you who knew me so well” exposes how familiarity can masquerade as knowing. This kind of relationship trains a person to shrink—to translate themselves into palatable gestures rather than honest expression. The result is emotional dissonance: the self you live with internally and the self-reflected back to you no longer align.
What makes the poem especially powerful is its recognition that love without knowing is not neutral—it is corrosive. When someone cannot see your fears, values, or evolving identity, you become emotionally alone even in partnership. That loneliness, sustained over years, can hollow a person out. It teaches endurance instead of joy, silence instead of truth.
Ending such a relationship is not a failure of love, but an act of psychological preservation. Sometimes, leaving is the only way to reclaim the self that has been quietly disappearing. “You Never Knew Me” affirms that being known is not a luxury in love—it is essential. And when knowing never arrives, choosing to leave can be the first honest recognition of who you are.
Simona A. Brinson
Photo by Dollar Gill on Unsplash
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