The Sickly Sweetness of Childhood: Love, Terror, and Sticky Summer Days

There’s something about summer that tastes like childhood—like cotton candy melting on your tongue, the sweat-streaked joy of running barefoot through sprinklers, and the thick, humid air clinging to your skin like a second memory. For many of us, childhood summers weren’t just a season—they were a feeling, both golden and haunting. A tangle of joy and ache, laughter and longing.

I remember the beach—sand hot enough to burn the soles of my feet, saltwater drying on my skin in itchy white patches, the ocean stretching out like a secret too big to tell. I also remember woods that felt like wonderlands, where neighborhood kids built forts from fallen branches and told stories that blurred truth and imagination. We played until the fireflies blinked awake, calling us home with their quiet glow.

Sticky fingers from funnel cake. The dizzy spin of the fair ride. The way cotton candy dissolved like a promise in your mouth. These memories live somewhere deep, saturated with sugar and sunburn.

But sweetness, when left too long in the heat, can rot.

For me, childhood was never just sweet. It was sickly sweet. The kind of sweetness that coats the throat until you choke on it. I lived with terror braided into love, fear hidden behind dance videos and neighborhood games. There were good days—so many good days—but even they carried an undertone, like music just slightly out of tune. The ache of knowing something wasn’t right, even if I couldn’t name it yet.

Summers were an escape and a stage. They offered a temporary forgetting, a sunlit performance of normalcy. But fear doesn’t take summers off. It lingers in the shadows of trees, in the sudden hush of a too-quiet room, in the spaces between laughter.

Still, summer taught me how to survive. How to sweat it out, how to keep moving. How to seek the joy that did exist—because it did. I loved those dance videos I made with friends, choreographing moves in the driveway under the unforgiving sun. I loved the way the beach felt like freedom. I loved the neon thrill of fairs, the creak of rides, the way the world seemed so big and full of color under carnival lights.

And I still carry those memories. They are sticky, yes—messy and complicated. But they are mine. They are the evidence that even in a childhood threaded with trauma, joy can take root and grow wild.

As adults, we often look back on childhood as either idyllic or painful. But most of us lived in the in-between. The real summer of childhood was neither perfect nor tragic. It was a paradox: sunshine and shadows. A sweet that stuck to the skin, both comforting and cloying.

Maybe that’s what makes summer memories so powerful. They remind us that beauty and pain often arrive hand in hand. That even in the hardest moments, joy is still possible—and sometimes, all the more precious for it.

The Ones That Lived: On Neglect, Healing, and the Mystery of Resilience

If you’re in a season of stillness or softness, this one’s for you.

I own fifty houseplants. Not a typo. Fifty. They surround my windowsills and bookshelves, drink in the light that trickles through the blinds, and lean toward the world like they want something from it. They’ve been my quiet companions for years—green things I could nurture when I didn’t know how to nurture myself.

And then I stopped.

Five months ago, I had foot surgery. The kind that takes something out of you, and then keeps taking. I didn’t mean to neglect them. But one week turned into three. My succulents went a full season without water. Not even a glance. I didn’t mist, prune, repot, or rotate. I barely moved.

And yet… they’re alive. Not just clinging on, but thriving.

I keep walking past them like they’re a miracle I don’t quite believe in. The Peace Lily and Anthuriums bloomed. The Pothos are cascading like they’re auditioning for a catalog. Even the Fiddle-Leaf Fig—which used to drop a leaf in protest every time I breathed near it—has put out new growth.

It doesn’t make sense. But also, it does.

Plants are built for drought. And maybe, in some quiet way, so am I.

Here’s what I’ve learned since:

Some of my plants went dormant. That’s what they do in winter. They slow down and conserve energy. They look like they’re doing nothing at all, but underground, there’s a soft, invisible kind of resilience. They’re waiting for better light. Not panicking. Not performing. Just being.

Some are hardy by nature—the plants with thick leaves and thick skin are built for long stretches without rain. They’ve adapted to scarcity. They know how to hold on when nothing good is coming in.

My plants had deep enough roots to survive because I’d cared for them well before the silence. They had reserves. They trusted the soil. They knew what it was like to be fed—and they held on until I could return.

And yes, maybe I got lucky. Maybe the light stayed steady, the temperatures didn’t swing, and the pests didn’t find their way in. But there’s more to it than odds.

There’s something here I needed to see.

Survival isn’t always a sign of perfect care. Sometimes it’s a sign of deep, ancestral wisdom.

These plants—my fifty green mirrors—didn’t need constant tending. They just needed enough. And maybe that’s a truth I’ve forgotten in my own healing. Thriving doesn’t always look like doing everything right. Sometimes resting is the most powerful thing you can do.

I thought they would die without me. I thought everything would fall apart the moment I let go. I didn’t even care honestly. I was more focused on my own pain. But they didn’t. And neither did I.

This isn’t a metaphor I was trying to write. But here it is anyway:

I think about the parts of me I’ve left alone lately. The inner places I haven’t watered. The parts I was afraid might wither if I stopped showing up perfectly. But healing—real healing—isn’t manicured. It’s not a checklist. It’s a season. A dormancy. A rooting deeper into the self.

I’ve been growing this whole time, even if I didn’t see it.

And maybe you have, too.

Maybe you’ve come through something lately—a loss, a reckoning, a long dark hallway of uncertainty. Maybe you feel behind, or brittle, or overdue for care. Maybe you think your neglect is the end of things.

But maybe it isn’t.

Maybe the bloom will come anyway.

Maybe the roots held on for you.

Maybe you are more resilient than you realized.

So here’s to the ones that lived.

To the ones that didn’t get everything they needed, but made it anyway. To the ones that went quiet and kept breathing. To the ones that waited for the light to change.

To the part of you that’s still reaching, even now.

The Pains of Patience

I’m in my mid-thirties and still haven’t figured my career out. I got my Master’s Degree in something I didn’t like. After a trip out west and two years of soul searching, I found my dream career taking care of plants, only to become diagnosed with an autoimmune disorder that prevents me from working full time in the industry. I have had to constantly pivot. It’s destabilizing. Not having a steady income can bring out feelings of utter worthlessness and embarrassment, especially at my age.

I finally figured out my new career path as a yoga instructor. I found a studio that I loved and found out when they were offering their certification program, excited to hear the beginning of January. I shared my excitement with friends and family at holiday parties.

Then life happened.

I sprained my right foot. I can’t drive or put weight on it for a month, then we have to reevaluate from there. I am three weeks in, so the yoga program must be put on hold. My doctor did not approve my program. This puts me back 6-12 months! I was crushed.

What am I going to do? I have a bum foot that can’t withstand anything and I can’t drive, so I sit on the couch all day alone. I simmer in resentment and fury. I have been getting lost in self-pity.

But then I’ll sit on the porch and breathe in the crispy clean, winter air. I sit in silence and look at the bare trees. They don’t look pretty. They don’t provide much shade or protection. They’re not sustaining a ton of wildlife right now.

However – I stare at them in awe.

I know how beautiful and helpful they’ll be in the spring. I know they’ll provide much needed shade for me in the summer heat. I know they’ll put on a magnificent show of oranges and reds in the fall. I know they’ll lay witness to hundred of births of baby birds. Fruit and purpose are right around the corner for the trees. They need time to reset.

So I’ll take the advice of the trees that have outlived my ancestors. I’ll follow their wise advice and practice patience in this time of darkness and uncertainty. I know I’ll bloom again when I’m meant to.

Do Flowers Have Feelings?

This basket of flowers was harvested from my own land. I had unlimited textures and colors to choose from. I picked grasses, flowers, berries, ferns, and ground cover. It was all free! The land hardly noticed I clipped anything. The bees kept gathering nectar below me, knowing I wasn’t threatening their food source. The bouquet turned out gorgeous! I would have easily had to pay over $100 for it at a Florist’s shop.

Another funky, free arrangement!

But do you see how I have to keep them outside on my porch? I do not use pesticides, and flowers come with tons of bugs. I don’t dare bring them inside because the pests will certainly take over my home and extensive houseplant collection. My wild bouquets didn’t last as long in the summer heat as they would indoors, but they made me just as happy. I changed the water every other day and would get at least a week out them, as opposed to the two or three weeks I would get from the pesticide ridden florist flowers.

I was employed as a Florist for four months. It was eye opening. It is not a sustainable or eco-friendly industry. The amount of chemicals and plastic waste that goes into it is sickening! I could not ethically work there – for the planet or my own health.

I also noticed a personality difference between the flowers. Could it be my own projection? Absolutely. But could it be real? Possibly…

There’s something primal about harvesting wildflowers. I never felt bad cutting stems because I left 200+ others in the field. I knew the others were going to continue supporting the ecosystem and that nature was happy to provide me with a beautiful bouquet for a week.

August Finds 2024

At the floral shop, the flowers I would receive in cardboard boxes from a Continent away seemed devoid of life or character. They are shipped in thin plastic buckets with minimal water to prevent spillage. The bucket is then placed inside of a plastic trash bag to prevent the inevitable spilt chemical water from ruining the cardboard shipping box. Then they are taped up and slapped with plastic straps on pallets. It was an ordeal to unload each box! I would get around 75+ boxes each week.

A lot of them are moldy from the dark, damp unpredictable shipping environments. Most come in dehydrated and sad looking. But what can we expect? I live in Midwest USA and our supplier shipped from Ecuador and Columbia.

Can you imagine growing strong in sunshine-filled fields on your mother plant in South America then being shrouded and crammed into dark, damp boxes for FOUR DAYS, then expected to live in who knows what kind of environment for two more weeks?

The longer I was in the industry, the more painful it became for me. My wildflowers that grow naturally are treated with respect and reverence. I don’t rush to cut them and they never travel more than ten miles back to my house. Each time I look at my personal arrangement, I picture the exact location I picked it from…a smile naturally forming on my lips. When they die, I throw them on my compost pile and they become useful to the Earth again. There is no waste in wildflower picking.

Florist Shop

However – not everyone has access to acres of wildflowers, or the ability to form an aesthetically pleasing bouquet (it’s so much harder than it looks). Special events don’t seem complete or luxurious without flowers. There’s no better feeling than getting fresh flowers in times of celebration, grieving, or “just because.” It’s a timeless tradition that aims to bring nature into our lives to remind us that life is worth living, we’re not alone, and that Mother Earth will provide for us. She compliments our sterile homes and offices with her wild beauty and fragrant blooms.

Maybe we’ve become too advanced as a society? If you think about the logistics of it all, the floral industry is impressive. I was able to receive fresh flowers in Midwest USA that were cut in South America 2-4 days before. That’s insane! We should feel proud of our technological advances. It used to take days to travel one state on horseback 200 years ago. Now we can fly 3,000 miles in less than six hours.

But just because we *can* doesn’t mean we *should.* Maybe it’s time to take a step back and listen to the Earth? She is screaming in pain. We are overusing and abusing her resources. She can’t handle our pace. She deserves respect and rest too.

I think the world would become a much healthier place if we realized all living things have feelings. I don’t think flowers have the complex emotions we do, but I do think the environment does as a whole. When massive fields are being abused for one specific crop/flower, they deteriorate. Nutrients are depleted from the soil; soil erosion then becomes an issue, which continues on in a domino effect.

What’s something you’ve noticed that has been taken advantage of because of technological advances and is contributing to the deterioration of the Earth?

The Russian Immigrant Desperate For Help

It was a gorgeous summer morning in 2024 and I was working at my dream job. I had my headphones in and listened to bird songs and nature tracks. I was in my own floral explosion world watering and pruning. I thought I heard a man yelling, so I took my ear buds out and located the anger.

The man was screaming, quite scarily, into a cell phone. He had papers in his hand. I purposely moved away from him because his energy was on fire. He went inside the store and I breathed a sigh of relief. In full transparency, I got scared. America is storing some of the darkest energy right now and you never know what people are capable of when their anger is spilling over into their words and actions.

10 minutes later he comes back out and looks around like he’s trying to find something. He locks eyes with me and starts hoofing it towards me. I ripped my earbuds out and felt fear, but remained calm. He started punching things in on his phone as I stared at him quizzically. Then his phone started spitting out things in English and he pushed it into my hand. I noticed it was a translator app and the languages were Russian and English.

We had a long back and forth conversation. He told me that he just arrived in America and has to be at a factory job tonight at 9pm with printed paperwork. I knew the place I worked had copiers, so I brought him back in with me. Surely my co-workers would oblige? This man is trying to get a fair job and all we have to do is print one piece of paper for him.

False. They were jerks. I was speechless! I couldn’t believe they wouldn’t do it and they kept spouting off corporate policy. I was enraged! I told him to follow me back outside by the flowers. I told him he needed to get to a public library or Staples where he get copies made because that’s how America is. However – he didn’t have a car and these places are miles away.

He was getting frustrated and I was feeling terrible for him. He kept pointing out gas station, fast food chains, and grocery stores that enveloped us.

“Sister, why not these places? I don’t have a car and I can’t be late to my first day!!”

Each time he addressed me he said, “Sister.” I’m sure that’s a cultural thing, but it made my heart grow exponentially for him. I wanted nothing more than to do all of it for him. I can’t imagine being an immigrant in a foreign country and not understanding their rules and regulations.

I tried my hardest to push him to get to a library or print center, but I don’t think he had any way of getting there on time. He said he was sure Taco Bell would print it for him, which I knew they wouldn’t. I told him,

“I’m so sorry you’re going through this. I’m glad you’re here. But America is greedy. Even for one piece of paper, they want you to pay for it. I wish it wasn’t this way, but it is. I know it’s not kind or helpful, but my hands are tied.”

I could tell my answer infuriated him as he shoved his phone in his pocket. It was clear he was done talking to me. I felt disheartened. Then out of no where he said, “Thank you, sister,” and gave me a tight hug. He spoke something in his mother tongue that seemed kind and he patted his heart.

I cried as he walked away and texted my husband and sisters. I told them how thankful I was for our blessings and asked for them to pray for him. I always wonder if he ever found kindness and was able to start his job? I pray he has found safety in America. Remember to always be kind.

The Sikh I Knew In Another Life

I worked as a nanny while I was going through college. There was a gorgeous park close to their house that I would drive my charges to. It had a massive, new playground and 40 acres of nature trails that led to a pond. We spent many days there because it was never busy and always had tons to do.

On this particular day, it was only me and one of the boys. No one else was there. We played on the playground for a while, then took off for the trails. It was nice only having one child to look after instead of four. I gave the child more breathing room to use his imagination and watched him from a distance, smiling. The three year old was chasing geese and it was as hilarious as it was heartwarming.

I noticed an elder in traditional Sikh gear sitting about 20 yards away on a bench. He was watching us. Normally, my spidey senses would alert for danger when a man watches us, but there was something so calming about him. He saw me look in his direction and started waving his hands, instructing me to come over. My charge was distracted at a safe distance, the man seemed friendly, so I approached.

The closer I got the harder he patted the bench, instructing me to sit down. I did. But I couldn’t understand him. We didn’t speak the language. I felt embarrassed and didn’t know what to do. He was very adamant on telling me the same thing over and over. It felt important and it felt personal to me. I apologized and said, “I’m so sorry! I only speak English. I don’t know what you’re saying.”

He smiled so big and fell silent. He sweetly grabbed my right hand and cupped it in both of his. He started pointing at my change and saying something while laughing. I felt him and his pure energy. I felt like I knew him from another life, which at the time was odd because I was an atheist. I didn’t want to let go of him. He brought a peace to my soul that I haven’t felt since.

My charge started bolting fast, so I had to go. I turned to him and said, “Thank you.” He squeezed my hand and let me go, rambling something joyous as I left.

This happened over 7 years ago, but it’s one of the most influential moments of my life. Did we know each other in another life? Was he a nice man just saying I was doing a good job raising a child? Was he talking about the beautiful weather? I’ll never know.

But the one thing I do know is, he cared. He wasn’t deterred by the impossible language barrier. He had a message to give me and he trusted that it would get across. He gave me a memory to hold onto forever and in it I only remember comfortably holding hands with a stranger, a beautiful spring day, peace, and children’s laughter.

What a beautiful gift…

Starting Over

Spring, a time of renewal and growth. It’s about new beginnings and rejuvenation. As I’ve gotten older, I look to nature to sync up my natural rhythm. I stopped caring about climbing the corporate ladder and the never ending “go go go.” I change with the seasons and it’s set me up for a stable, full life.

In summer, I ramp up. I garden, exercise, and become much more social. There’s graduations, weddings, and cook outs. I take it all in and breathe deeply. I’m more positive and productive. I savor the beauty of the never setting sun, fresh fruit, full trees, and gorgeous blooms. I don’t need as much sleep and feel naturally light.

In fall, I’m thankful. I start to slow my roll. I take in the last moments of the glowing leaves, shining bright oranges, deep reds, and soft yellows. I love the chunky sweaters and warm apple cider. I get excited about spooky decorations and the cheerful kids wanting to collect as much candy as possible. I think deeply about what I want to let go and what I need to heal as the year wraps up.

It sounds easy, but changing mental states can feel scary. It’s hard not operating the same everyday, but I know the burn out feels worse. The last few years of letting go of perfection and over-performing have been humbling to say the least. I feel judgment from the majority of people who don’t seem to subscribe to seasonal adjustments. But when I let go of perceptions and look to nature, I feel whole and on track.

This year hit differently though. I was hit with two major medical setbacks. I was diagnosed with an autoimmune disorder that prevents me from being in the scorching sun and I suffered a severe foot injury that involved surgery and six months of rehab, four of which were couch bound. It was horrific. I’m still not back to my pre-injury self. I don’t know if I ever will be either.

I’m ready for my springtime renewal. I want to start seeds and mow the newly green grass. I want to hike with my dog in the spring air and feel fullness. I want to set new goals and start working towards them…but I can’t. I’m not physically able. It’s left me scared and confused. I still feel like I’m in the dead of winter.

I thought I would be better by now. I thought I would be so much further than I am. I worry that I’m never going to get my stamina back. I feel lost and out of tune. This is the first time my body isn’t changing with the natural seasons and I don’t know what to do about it. I look to the trees and flowers and feel bitterness. I’m jealous of their effortless, natural transformation. I long for easy growth and seamless transitions, but they’re not coming.

I wish I could say that I choose positivity and hope, but most days negative feelings wash over me. I want to hide and stay in the darkness. I feel unsettled with the longer days and changing into pajamas at 5pm still. I see my neighborhood coming alive again. Kids play basketball and ride bikes, and all I feel is fury. I can’t believe I took my physical health for granted. Being able-bodied my entire life, I didn’t know the struggles people with disabilities go through. It’s so much harder to live and it’s as if no one else lays witness to it. It’s an internal struggle that I have to face alone.

I pray that I can have the fortitude to keep moving forward. I hope my attitude adjusts with the changing season. I want my jealously to wane. Until then, I will continue to sit in the darkness and respect myself as I am today. I might not be blooming, but I will be one day. This might be a year of winter and I’m going to have to let that be okay. I know I can’t be the only one going through this. Instead of looking to nature for camaraderie, maybe it’s time to look towards other humans who are also experiencing a long winter.

Can you relate?

Avoiding Motherhood

I’ve been reading my book outside in the cold spring air. The sun is shining and I’m not moody or anxious. I can breathe out here. My book is about a mother telling her three adult daughters how, when you’re older, you don’t care to go to the carnival anymore…you don’t believe in Santa or the Easter Bunny. The magic of life is drained away and you have to deal with reality. You hold all sides of life – the boring, the mundane, the evils, the triumphs, and the beauty. She was trying to explain to them that loving their stable, boring father was infinitely better than loving her famous actor boyfriend in her 20’s. They couldn’t believe her.

It hit me with a hard dose of reality. I can remember being young, naive, and in love. My husband, then boyfriend, was only good. We went to carnivals, on bike rides, to parties, to ice cream shops, bought Easter baskets, and had fun at bowling alleys. We knew life had hardships because our parents were killed when they were young, but we were young enough to compartmentalize the evil because the high of young love was so great.

I have tears slowly streaming down my face at the nostalgia of it all.

This makes his hand on the small of my back the other day 10 times more special.

Being in a romantic relationship with someone for 16 years, I’ve experienced the magic falling away. It’s hard to connect with, or even remember, the highs of the honeymoon phase because it’s not our normal anymore. We’ve been through financial hardships, affairs, therapy, family wars, substance misuse, and career changes. We became adults, when we used to be kids. Love used to be our only job and we did it so well. Our rose colored glasses faded to clear lenses. We see life for what it really is – impossibly hard and innately beautiful. We appreciate the hardships because the calluses make our bond stronger everyday. We have a silent underlying fear of losing one another because our lives have become one. How could one exist without the other? We are each other’s home.

As I have been housebound for four months, I have become an expert at watching tv. After my surgery, we binged Breaking Bad. It was horrific. The season finale made me want to vomit. Seeing Walt abandon his family and leave them in financial and emotional ruin brought up all of the demons from my distant past…the dark house, the absent parent hardened by immense grief, the broken teenager, the new normal of fantasizing about the warm past. I cried so many tears. We picked Young Sheldon after it because it was lighthearted and funny. This was our second rewatch. I used to love it and laugh at it, but knowing George dies in the end taints every season. I didn’t want to see their comfortable living and small world problems anymore, knowing that soon enough they would be struck with insurmountable grief. I can’t unsee the last season and feel the full joy of the previous seasons. They’re tainted. I want to yell through the screen, “Savor this! Stop fighting about stupid stuff because George won’t be there soon!!”

I remember my therapist telling me that she had to censor what her oldest child watches because she was deeply affected by emotionally charged shows. I thought it was ridiculous, but now I understand because it happens to me too. My life is rich with deeply felt emotions. While I sob at people dying, others watch it dry eyed. They can’t connect to something they haven’t experienced. My past washes over me as the scenes nail every emotion I’ve tried to forget. I have catalogued every emotion under the sun.

I’m bitter that my past has controlled my present and future. I hate that my glasses were only rose colored for the first four years of my life, while others have them into their 40’s. I didn’t bring kids into this world based on my own experience. I projected my trauma onto my unborn. They never materialized because I was doing the most heroic thing a mother can ever do – protect her kids from evil. I prevented the heartache of being bullied, the high statistical possibility of sexual abuse, financial ruin, of losing a parent to an untimely death, their first heartbreak, prejudice, and failing health. I took the bullet for them. They never asked for the gift of a hard life…they never asked for life at all.

But is that fair? Is my lack of an easy, beautiful, rich life their fault? Is my inability to immerse myself, and believe, in the innate good of the world their problem?

Maybe I missed the point of life entirely. Instead of striving to provide the perfect life for them, I should have accepted the reality of a nuanced life. Maybe a child’s love could have healed my broken heart enough to make me a good enough mother. Maybe the bond with my child, my own flesh and blood, could have given me the chance of redemption…a path to a beautiful life for the both of us. I could try with all my might to keep their world rosy long enough to withstand the certainty of an unfair world. I could give them the gift of a safe, warm, stable childhood that could soothe their broken adult hearts. I could lay a path so stable that my own insecurities would never bleed into theirs. I could fail again and again as a mother, yet still be humble enough to accept their ultimate forgiveness that they would be equipped to give because I modeled it enough times. I could be the definition of unconditional love that they could always reference. I could be their safe space to land, even after death.

My Dead Parents Haunt Me

I’m 34 years old and lost my mom in a tragic accident when I was 14. Then my dad died of a sudden heart attack when I was 31. I hardly have any memories of my mom left, and by the time my dad died, we’d hadn’t spoken in 4 years.

I have been having mysterious health issues and the specialists are trying to figure out the issue. When I met my Rheumatologist for the first time, he spent an hour going over my intake form with me meticulously line-by-line. When he got to the family history list, he saw that both of my parents were deceased.

“Both of your parents have died. Am I reading that correctly?” I clinically confirmed, “Yes. My mom was killed in a car accident and my dad died from a sudden, unexpected heart attack.” I think he was waiting for me to have some emotion, but it never came.

His young eyebrows pinned together, puzzled by my lack of outward emotion and said, “Wow. That must be really difficult. I can’t imagine not having my parents or family.” I light-heartedly agreed and signaled to move on. I knew if he kept probing I might lose it.

When my parents died, I found it hard to speak to people about it. I hated breaking down in tears and becoming inaudible. It is the thing that makes me feel the weakest. So I would turn to the trees. I’d go on long walks, alone at night, and cry/scream at the sky or simply talk about my day…things I would call my parents about. It was pitiful, but healing.

I had huge trees all around my neighborhood. They towered over me at night like a blanket. After big storms, some of my favorites would be the victims of high winds and lightning. I would tear up for a couple of days when I passed them. It was hard for me to accept, but I got used to it.

Unlike humans, grieving for a tree is relatively quick and painless. I miss it, but I know that something else will fill its place. It’s a space of opportunity. I saw a man use a chainsaw to create a chair out of the left over trunk. I saw multiple people create natural flower pots out of the stumps. One person inserted his flag pole in it. And a lot of people left them alone and new growth would come.

Isn’t that just like life? Losing people is HARD. They took a piece of my soul with them. I wasn’t whole anymore and it takes time to rebuild. I can’t throw dirt in it and plant beautiful flowers. I have to give myself grace and grieve what I had, what I lost, and what I’ll never get.

As of today, I don’t think I want to have children. They won’t have grandparents and I won’t have a mom to call in the middle of the night when I’m panicked or broken. I won’t get to see my dad teaching them everything and anything that has to do with the woods. There will be no vacations or Christmas’ with my family of origin.

My heart is still tender. It was a huge milestone when I lost both of my parents. It’s like I’m lost and floating at sea all alone. No one holds my past. It’s been erased. I have no one to flex that muscle with, so it atrophied and died. I must exist in the present moment only. I have no past to bring into it.

When I lost my vantage point of where I came from, life became scarier. Who could I depend on if I got sick/unemployed/something catastrophic? No one. My heart has been so hardened by their deaths, that it’s nearly impossible for me to depend on anyone.

Just like the trees.

Whatever trauma trees go through, it shows. They will always have the bump and inner rings of where a limb was. They will show cracks and bark skinning. It will shape them forever. They can scar just as easily as we can. It does take time for them to heal and they never quit going. They instinctually know to grow where the light leads them.

At the end of the day, that’s all I can try to do too.