I’ve been collecting broken mornings
in jars that once held
moonlight.
Each one fogs the glass
like a soft exhale
from a dream I couldn’t finish.
But still—
the birds keep singing,
and the clouds,
like gentle leviathans,
float on as if they know
the sun will show up again.
I pass trees that bow
from the weight of weather,
yet bloom
without apology.
I want that kind of peace—
not loud,
not sudden—
but the kind that grows in the cracks
of yesterday’s heaviness,
that drips down like honey
into a life
that remembers sweetness.
Some nights I cry
for the version of me
who thought love had to hurt
to be real.
I’m softer now—
not weaker.
There’s a difference.
And I know
the world doesn’t hate me.
It just rains sometimes.
And sometimes,
the right people
arrive like spring
after a ruthless frost—
quiet,
warm,
and entirely enough.
I’m not there yet,
but I’m going.
And maybe that’s
the most beautiful
part.