Filling the Gaps
- Katherine Tatsuda

- Oct 17
- 2 min read
Updated: Oct 21

October 16, 2025
I included this line in one of my recent essays:
“Look how well I love the unloving.”
I just reread it and had to pause—
wondering if I was being dramatic for effect,
or generalizing someone’s behavior to make a point.
And then I remembered a conscious decision I made at the end of last summer.
By that point, there was already a mountain of painful experiences and shattered trust between us—
pebbled with quality time, acts of service, vulnerable conversations, dinners with my kids, gifts, a 107 mile trek,
and meaningful physical intimacy.
We had barely seen each other for weeks,
and when he changed plans on me again—
something in me broke.
I was so tired.
Tired of feeling small.
Tired of feeling unchosen, unimportant, and unloved.
I took a day or two to process everything.
To figure out what to do.
I hiked, I felt the heavy, I thought of the good, and I cried.
And I told my son, “Please never treat a woman like he treats me.”
Saying it out loud to him made me hear it myself,
but I wasn’t ready to leave.
The pull of him made me think:
I loved loving him.
But I didn’t like how he loved me.
I believe he felt love for me.
But loving someone and being willing to treat them with
respect, honesty, and care are not the same thing. And they were missing.
But I loved loving him.
It sounds simple, but it wasn’t.
Because loving him gave me purpose.
It made me feel alive and wanted, sometimes—
and I hadn’t before had anyone I wanted to love so thoroughly.
I loved his intelligence, his presence, his energy, him.
And I thought, through my care, I could soften something unreachable in him.
And if I tried harder, he would change.
And even when he hurt me, I kept loving.
Through inconsistency,
through obvious lack of consideration,
through empty promises
and stories I suspected were lies
but chose to believe anyway.
I poured love into the gaps,
trying to fill what he would not.
I loved loving him.
The giving.
The soothing.
The devotion.
The fleeting moments of affection before the next inconsistency.
And maybe that’s what that line really means.
“Look how well I love the unloving.”
It isn’t self-pity.
It’s a mirror—
showing me how deeply I equated love with effort,
with lack of true reciprocity,
with choosing to stay with someone based on hope and loyalty
at the expense of myself.
I love that I love deeply.
Now I have a better idea of who to share it with—
and what is truly worthy of me.



