Monday, February 9, 2026

Please, choose each other...

 


The paramedics were strapping me onto the stretcher, the red lights flashing against the neighbor’s garage, and do you know what the loudest sound in the night was?
It wasn't the siren. It wasn't my jagged breathing.
It was you two. Standing in the driveway, arguing over who was supposed to check on me, whose turn it was to drive, who was "too busy" with work.
I closed my eyes and swallowed the lump in my throat, not from the pain in my chest, but from the pain in my heart. I wanted to scream, but I only had the strength to whisper one truth to myself:
“The day I’m no longer here… you will only have each other.”
Listen to me. Please.
I know life in America is hard right now. I know you’re tired. I see the stress in your eyes from your mortgages, the exhaustion from your corporate jobs, the noise of politics that tries to split you apart, and the endless scroll of screens that keeps you distracted.
But I see you fighting over small things as if love is something you can afford to lose. I see you keeping score—who called last, who spent more on Christmas, who Mom loved "best."
But that day is coming. Faster than you think.
The day will arrive when I won’t be the referee. There will be no more Sunday dinners where I force you to sit at the same table. No more Thanksgiving turkeys where I make you put your phones away. No more group texts where I’m the only reason you respond.
And when that quiet Tuesday comes, and the funeral flowers wilt, the only thing left standing will be what you built between yourselves.
It will be love… or it will be a terrifying silence.
Being a brother or a sister isn’t just about having the same DNA or showing up in the same old photo albums.
It’s remembering the time you camped in the backyard when you were ten.
It’s knowing exactly what a glance means across a crowded room without saying a word.
It’s being the only other person in the world who remembers the sound of your father’s laugh or the smell of my Sunday pancakes.
Being siblings means being a sanctuary, not a courtroom. It means being home, not a battleground.
So, while I still have breath in my lungs to ask this of you: Drop the pride.
Whatever old wound you are nursing? Let it go. Whatever political argument you think you need to win? It doesn’t matter. Whatever money you think is owed? It’s just paper.
Call your brother. Visit your sister. Not because you have to, but because the world is a cold place, and you are the only people who share the same history. Forgive each other, even if the apology isn't perfect. Even if they don't deserve it yet.
Don't let a misunderstood text message or a rough holiday turn into ten years of silence. I have seen too many families in this country crumble because pride weighed more than blood.
Because when I’m gone, I don’t want you to grieve me in isolation.
I don't want you standing on opposite sides of my grave. I want you to hold each other up when your knees buckle. I want you to look at each other and say, "We’re okay. We have each other."
That is my peace. That is my calm.
The house, the car, the savings—that is not your inheritance.
Your inheritance is each other.
Please, choose each other... before you no longer have the choice.

Source: The Story Maximalist on Facebook

Saturday, February 7, 2026

A Hope of Spring

 


And as the light returns,
Hope creeps back in, too,
The promise of what's to come,
Of life that starts anew.
As the winter sheds its layers,
And Spring prepares her way,
Each bud, each leaf, and flower
Will appear to greet the day.
The world awakens gently,
With colours bold and bright,
Though chill blows in the breeze,
We welcome back the light.
As the sun appears once more,
New dreams come into sight,
With every bloom a promise,
Nature's timing, always right.
So let us cast off shadows,
Embrace the fragrant air,
For in this dance of seasons,
Hope finds us everywhere ....

C.E Coombes ' A Hope of Spring'
Art: Daniel A. Gordon

Source: Serendipity Corner on Facebook

Friday, February 6, 2026

Thursday, February 5, 2026

I want to be sure

 


Oh, the nights I have wasted
Caught up in my head
When I could be sleeping
And dreaming instead
The hours I’ve spent
Wishing I could be thinner
And picking apart
What I’d see in the mirror
The days I have lost
To my stubborn self-doubt
The time it has cost me
To count myself out
The moments I’ve missed
Wishing I could be more
Then hating myself
Every time I fell short
The seconds I’ve squandered
As time ticked on by
Whilst I tried to reach
For a bar set too high
But that’s in the past -
Time spent worrying, wishing,
The dark, sleepless nights
And the things I was missing
Cause all of those hours
And days are now gone;
No time to look back
Only time to move on
To more time for sleeping
And more time for dreams
Less time to tear myself
Apart at the seams
Less time for mirrors
And less time for hate
Less doubting myself
Whilst I’m lying awake
More time to limbo
The bar that I set
More moments for stubborn
Self-love and respect
‘Cause time marches on
It will never stand still
And I don’t want all of
My days to be filled
With wanting and worry,
With dread and with doubt
No, I want to be sure
I’ve made
each
moment
count
*****
Becky Hemsley 2023
Artwork by Gisele Oliveira F (gisifraga on Instagram)
This poem is from Words to Remember

Source: Becky Hemsley Poetry on Facebook

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Secret Places - Jeff Victor
























Image source: Etheric Echoes on Facebook
Music is my favorite CD Secret Places by Jeff Victor shared from YouTube

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

I have earned the right.

 


Stop looking at me with that "sad puppy" face when I tell you I live alone. I’m 81 years old. I live by myself in the house I’ve owned for forty years. And I’m not a tragedy waiting to happen.
When people hear "elderly woman living alone," their minds go straight to the dark places. "Are you lonely?" "Aren't you scared at night?" "Maybe it's time to move in with your daughter?"
Bless their hearts, they mean well. But there is a secret about aging that nobody tells you: I’m not just "living alone." I am living with dignity.
I did my tour of duty. I raised three kids. I packed thousands of brown-bag lunches, scrubbed grass stains out of baseball uniforms, worked double shifts, and stretched a dollar bill until it screamed just to keep food on the table. I sat on hard bleachers in the rain. I waited up on the couch until the headlights pulled into the driveway. I listened to heartbreaks at 2:00 AM and kept everyone’s secrets.
My life was full. It was loud. It was chaotic. It was wonderful.
And now? Now, there is silence. The floorboards creak, but they are familiar sounds. The footsteps are just mine.
For a little while, after my husband passed, I thought the silence meant something was wrong with me. Society tells us: "You need to be with family." "You shouldn't be by yourself."
I started to wonder... am I selfish for wanting my own space? Am I "broken" because I don't cry myself to sleep every night?
Then, one morning, I sat at my kitchen table with my coffee and watched the sun hit the front porch. And it hit me: I am not abandoned. I am not forgotten. I am free.
I can still think clearly. I write my own checks for the electric bill. I decide what happens in my day.
And my day is beautiful: Breakfast at noon if I feel like it. Reading a book without interruption. Original work by The Story Maximalist. Watching my shows without fighting over the remote. Watering my hydrangeas and talking to them like old friends.
My children have their own loud, busy lives now—and I am so proud of them. They visit on Sundays. They call. They care. But it is not their job to fill every hour of my day. I raised them to be independent, and they allow me to be the same.
Living alone doesn't mean I am unloved. It means I am trusted. They trust my strength. They trust my mind. They trust that I will pick up the phone and ask for help if I really need it. And I do ask—when I need it. That’s not weakness. That’s wisdom.
I’m not isolated. The mailman waves every morning. The girl at the grocery store knows I like my bananas a little green. The ladies from church call and ask, "You still kicking?" and we laugh until our sides hurt.
No, I am not always happy. Sometimes the sadness comes. But sadness comes to everyone—married people, single people, teenagers, and seniors.
What I feel most of the time isn't loneliness. It is peace. Peace in my favorite armchair. Peace in my quiet routine. Peace in knowing that for 60 years I took care of everyone else...
And now? Now I have earned the right to just take care of me.

Source: The Story Maximalist on Facebook