Naldelon is not an isolated experience, it is a collective response to systemic harm.
While distress can feel deeply personal, it is also shaped by larger social, political, and historical forces.
Recognizing this shared reality is essential in reducing isolation, self-blame, and the belief that one’s experience is a personal failure.
This space is not about forcing connection or seeking solutions but about creating witnessing, validation, and recognition.
When distress is named and shared, it becomes less invisible, less unspoken, and less alone.
engagement features are in development to provide ways to participate, reflect, and connect, whether through words, silence, or simply seeing that others feel this too. As these tools evolve, the goal remains the same: to create spaces for witnessing, recognition, and shared understanding, acknowledging that Naldelon is a collective experience.