Saturday, March 14, 2026

Fragility


 











Your fragility is also your strength.
Be soft, rather than hard and brittle.
Brittle things break, whereas softness
has the ability to rebound.
Your vulnerability is your ally,
It holds your truth.
Empathy for each living soul
is a necessity
in an unforgiving world.
Embrace the humility that you
seek to find in others ..

By C.E. Coombes
Art via Pinterest
Source: Serendipity Corner on Facebook

Friday, March 13, 2026

Could you say that you died happy

 


One time I met a man
Who only had a month to live
And I asked him if he had
Any advice that he could give
He said “I wake each morning
Knowing I am going to die
So each day must remind me
I am blessed to be alive
You see, my life’s on countdown
As each hour is unfurled
I know the clock is ticking
On my time here in this world
But what you’re overlooking
Is that it’s the same for you -
You know that I am dying
But forget that you are too
So make the most of sunshine
And go dancing in the rain
And sing a little louder
When your favourite music plays
Notice nature’s colours,
Savour everything you taste
Stop waiting for tomorrow
‘Cause you’ve got no time to waste
And could you say convincingly
That you’d have no regrets?
If just the next few days or weeks
Were all that you had left?”
And then my breath caught quickly
When he turned to me and asked
“Could you say that you died happy
If this day had been your last?”
*****
I revisit this one often ~ Becky Hemsley 2023
Artwork by Victor Bauer
This poem is from Letters from Life

Source: Becky Hemsley Poetry on Facebook

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Shel Silverstein

 


Shel Silverstein (1930–1999) was a prolific American author, poet, cartoonist, and songwriter known for his whimsical, irreverent style. Famous for children's classics like The Giving Tree and Where the Sidewalk Ends, he also wrote hits like "A Boy Named Sue" and was a cartoonist for Playboy. 

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Don’t let worry in.

 



“Don’t let worry in.”
Don’t drink from that bitter cup. Every time you want to worry, simply listen to YOUR little voice. That tiny, faint voice speaking inside you. The one that has always been speaking, since your birth, with a deep sense of assurance and affection.
In fact, this voice is talking to you right now, as you read these feeble words. The voice is saying, “This guy’s kinda weird, but he DOES have a point.”
You know this voice. It’s a voice that comes from the center of your chest and radiates outward, like a sonar.
You know this voice so well, for it is your dearest and oldest friend. This voice is such a part of your being that you hardly even recognize it anymore. Sometimes, you aren’t sure whether it’s your own voice talking. That’s how close you two are.
It’s important to note, I am not referring to the voice inside your head. No. That voice is smoking crack. Your head voice is always panicking about stuff.
Every time your head voice hears bad news, it immediately plays out the worst-case scenario, which always ends with your untimely death. Which is the worst thing your brain can imagine.
But your brain is wrong. The worst thing that could ever happen to you is not death. Death, at its core, no matter what you choose to believe, is a transformation. Death is an emergence from a cocoon.
But that little soul voice is saying, “Don’t fear things that kill the body. Fear only things that kill the soul.”
Such as the self-torture of worry. Worry will kill your soul.
Worrying is a fate far worse than death. Worry is poison. Worry is paying a debt you do not owe to collectors who do not exist.
As I write these words, there is a small bird outside my window. And that little voice inside me is interrupting this paragraph and saying, “Does that bird look worried to you?”
“No,” I reply. “Birds never look worried. Why don’t birds worry?”
“Bird brains,” the voice says. “They are incapable of worry.”
“I wish I had a bird brain.”
“No comment.”
“What kind of bird is that?” I ask.
“It’s my bird. That’s what kind.”
“Yours?”
“And did you know this bird has a name?”
“A name? Really?”
“Oh, certainly,” the voice says. “And all its tiny bird siblings have names, too. Its mama bird has a name. Its daddy bird has a name.”
“Do all the birds on earth have names?”
“They do.”
“Even little ones?”
“Especially them.”
“Who names them?”
“The same one who feeds them.”
“Who feeds them?”
“The same one who watches over them. The same one who knows whenever one of them falls to the ground. The same one who holds them all in His hand, like a mother.”
“Do you watch over me like that?”
“Every moment.”
“Do you love me?”
“What do you think, bird brain?”

Source: Sean Dietrich on Facebook

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Things That Make You Think


 











The officer reached for his radio to call Social Services when he saw the empty leash dragging on the pavement behind me.
“Sir,” the young deputy said, stepping out of his cruiser. He kept one hand near his belt, his eyes darting between my face and the empty red nylon strap. “Do you know where you are right now? Do you know… there’s no dog attached to that clip?”
I stopped. I tightened my grip on the handle.
I knew exactly what he was seeing.
He saw an 82-year-old man in a faded Navy windbreaker, standing on the corner of Oak and 4th at 6:30 A.M., talking to thin air.
I knew what the neighbors were seeing, too. I’ve seen the blinds twitch in the windows. I know what they write on the neighborhood Facebook group. “Old Mr. Henderson is losing it.” “It’s not safe.” “Someone should call his daughter before he hurts himself.”
My daughter, Jessica, was just here last week. She left a glossy brochure on my kitchen counter for “Silver Creek Assisted Living.” She thinks I’m slipping. She thinks I’m lonely. She thinks my mind is dissolving into a fog of dementia.
But what they call madness, I call loyalty.
You see, for 45 years, this morning walk wasn’t a solo act. It was a trio. Me, my wife Sarah, and a rescue Golden Retriever named Rusty.
Every morning, before the Florida heat kicked in, we walked. We walked through the recessions of the 80s. We walked through the silence after the kids went to college. We walked when we were broke, and we walked when we finally paid off the mortgage.
That walk was the heartbeat of our marriage.
Rusty went first. It’s the tragedy of dogs; they break your heart by simply not living long enough. The morning after we buried him in the backyard, I went to put the leash away in the garage.
“Don’t,” Sarah said. Her voice was sharp, cracking a little.
She grabbed the leash. And we walked. Just the two of us.
I carried the coffees—mine black, hers with two Splendas and a splash of hazelnut. She carried the empty leash.
I thought it was grief. I thought it would pass. But she carried it every single morning for six years.
When I finally asked her why she insisted on dragging that empty leash around the neighborhood, inviting stares, she squeezed my hand.
“It’s not empty, Jim,” she told me. “It’s heavy. It’s holding the weight of every time he made us laugh. Every time he pulled us toward the park. It’s muscle memory, Jim. My hand just… misses him.”
I didn’t get it then. I thought it was eccentric.
But I get it now.
Seven months ago, the heart attack took Sarah. It happened in the kitchen, while she was making toast. No warnings. No long goodbyes. Just… gone.
The silence in my house isn’t just quiet. It’s deafening. It screams.
For two weeks, I sat in my recliner. I didn’t shave. I didn’t eat. The world turned gray. The brochure for the nursing home started looking less like a prison and more like a surrender.
But then, I looked at the hook by the door.
I grabbed the thermos. I made the coffee—two Splendas, splash of hazelnut. I don’t even like hazelnut. But I made it for her.
And I grabbed the red leash.
So, I walk.
I walk past the spot where she used to stop and complain about the neighbor’s unkempt lawn. I pause at the bench where we used to sit and watch the sunrise. I speak to her. I tell her about the grandkid’s soccer game. I tell her I miss her cooking.
And for twenty minutes, I’m not a lonely widower in a silent house.
I can feel her. I can feel her hand in mine. I can feel the rhythm of our life, keeping time with my steps.
The young deputy was still staring at me, waiting for an answer. He looked like a good kid. Probably about the same age as my grandson.
“I’m not lost, son,” I said, my voice raspy.
I held up the thermos. “This coffee is for my wife, Sarah. She passed seven months ago.”
I held up the leash. “And this… this was for our dog, Rusty. She carried it for him. Now, I carry it for her.”
I looked him dead in the eye.
“People think grief is a mental illness,” I told him. “They want you to take a pill and ‘move on.’ But you don’t move on from your home. You don’t move on from your other half.”
“This isn’t dementia,” I said, shaking the leash gently. “This is devotion. I’m not walking an invisible dog. I’m taking the long way home with the woman I love.”
The officer’s hand dropped from his radio. His posture softened. He looked down at his own wedding band, twisting it on his finger.
“I… I’m sorry, sir,” he whispered.
“Don’t be,” I said. “We’re having a lovely morning.”
He nodded, tipped his cap, and got back in his car. He didn’t call Social Services.
So, if you drive through my town and see an old man walking an empty leash, don’t pity me. Don’t call the authorities.
I’m the luckiest man on earth.
Because while everyone else is walking alone, staring at their phones… I’m walking with my family.
Grief is just love with nowhere to go. So every morning, I give it a place to stretch its legs.
Discover more meaningful short stories on Things That Make You Think on Facebook.

Monday, March 9, 2026

Plant a seed...

 


I planted a wish in my pocket. I’m waiting to see if it blooms.

"Planting seeds in the pocket of my heart. I am blooming petals of confidence and magic. And after all this time, I am coming home to myself."
















Image Source: Letters from Annawin on Facebook

The verbige between them is from Google search for similar phrases. Another of my rabbit hole finds.

Sunday, March 8, 2026

When you're lost

 


And know, that when you're lost,
And you're unsure of which way to go,
A gentle hand will guide you,
Through the wind the rain and snow.
Theres a light out there, in the wilderness,
Shining bright to guide you home,
You are never gone from sight,
So you must never feel that you're alone.
The Universe will keep you safe,
In a protecting, loving, hold,
Whilst the one who loves his children,
Leads you back into his fold ...

~ C.E. Coombes
Image via Pinterest
Source: Serendipity Corner on Facebook