Here I am again–seated in my favourite spot, oatmilk vanilla latte in hand, the soft hum of the coffee shop wrapping me like a familiar song. My laptop glows in front of me, but for once, it’s not work that brings me here. It’s that quiet pull to write… to just be.
This morning, I woke up to the news: the world has a new Pope.
Even though I’m not Catholic, I felt something move inside me–like joy blooming in a place I didn’t expect. Isn’t it strange, how a single announcement halfway across the world can stir something so personal in your chest? Like the world decided to change overnight–while I was fast asleep, drifting through nothing in particular.
It made me wonder: how many things in this world are shifting while we’re unaware? While we’re just brushing our teeth, cooking breakfast, stuck in traffic, or just trying another ordinary Tuesday?
And maybe, right now, I’m shifting too.
In just a few weeks, I’ll be walking into a new chapter. A new environment. New people, new air, new routines. It’s something I’ve been waiting for over the past few months–hoping, praying, holding on.
And now that it’s finally here, I’m both excited and nervous.
But mostly, I’m hopeful.
Maybe this time, it will feel right. Maybe this time, it will last.
There’s something about beginnings that feel like taking a deep breath after being underwater for too long. That moment when your lungs fill again, and you realize–oh, I’m alive, I’m really alive.
Lately, life has been moving faster than I expected. Changes, feelings, realizations–all hitting me in waves. And yet… I don’t feel overwhelmed. Not like I used to. It feels like maturity, or maybe just acceptance.
I used to spiral when things got tough–thinking too much, questioning everything, holding on too tightly to what I couldn’t control. But these days, when something heavy lands on my chest, I pause. I close my eyes. I breathe. I tell myself it’s okay to feel. And then I look at the same problem, just from a slightly different angle.
Sometimes all it takes is one small shift–in perspective, in posture, in breath–and suddenly the weight becomes lighter.
It’s not magic. It’s not always easy. But it’s real. And it works.
Gratitude, I’ve learned, is one of the strongest tools we carry.
It doesn’t erase the struggle–but it softens it.
When I focus on what I do have, what I’ve survived, and the small joys in between, I feel powerful in a way I can’t quite explain.
Grounded.
Human.
Home.
Of course, the mind still wanders.
Sometimes it runs without warning–crafting stories that don’t exist, playing out fears like films in my head. But I’m learning not to let it take the driver’s seat.
The mind is wild–but it can be trained.
With time, with patience, with love.
I remind myself that not everything I think is true.
That sometimes, peace isn’t found in knowing all the answers–but in trusting that whatever comes, I’ll meet it with grace.
So here I am. Writing again. Breathing again.
Life is happening all around me–and for once, I’m not rushing through it.
I’m here. I’m present.
And in this stillness, I feel alive.
“Not all shifts are loud. Some begin in silence, with a breath, a thought, and a little more hope than yesterday.”
🤗🤗
ReplyDeleteGod Bless ☺️
ReplyDeleteYou deserve a life full of happiness and positivity. Fighting!!
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