Covert Joy
I love words, images, and music that stir the heart and soul. This space is a collection of quotes, images, music, and poetry I’ve discovered across the web—each one moving me in its own way. I claim no credit for any content unless otherwise noted. These pieces were found on various platforms including Pinterest, Facebook, Google, and other online sources. If any content shared here belongs to you and you would prefer it not be included, please contact me and it will be removed. ♬ ♬ -▲= ♬
Thursday, March 26, 2026
Willie Nelson - Just Breathe
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Happiness
Written by Journey of a Mountain Woman on Facebook (Shirley Noe Swiesz) May she rest in peace)
Sometimes I think of the weirdest things and I have I no idea why. Today I was thinking of happiness and how we often pile responsibility for that experience on other people...it might be a sibling, Parents, spouse, friends, boss, church, school, job. It could be anything.
I'm reminded of a friend who died in Alaska. Her last words to me were..."I can't live with him and I can't live without him. I'm so unhappy." I have often wondered if she had taken her happiness into her own hands, if her life would have been different. If she had gone to the commander and showed the bruises, she might have lived to raise her children. I'm not trying to blame the victim but sometimes we simply have to make choices.
I have opened my home to many only to have them say, "i'm unhappy"...mother-in-law, siblings, friends, relatives. I have been unhappy many times but like anger it disappears quickly. So does happiness, for we often go from one thing to another and find a dozen reasons to be unhappy. I have to often remind myself what makes me happy...being in the mountains, picking peaches in the summer sun in SC, reading a good book and a cup of hot coffee, sitting by a campfire even in my own yard, a conversation with a good friend. I don't need to see or talk to a good friend every day to keep me happy, just to know they're there for me is enough.
I am happy quilting, or watching a movie or digging in the dirt. But everyone is different and I believe there are different levels of happiness, one level for me is to find a great piece of junk, or that second cup of coffee with the morning news....perhaps the best levels are contentment, graditude, and knowing that a job that you undertook was well done.
I have no idea why I thought of this and an even less idea of why I wrote it...but I hope we take a few minutes each day to put a little gold star beside the things that made us happy that day...you surely remember how as a child you got little stars beside your name in school when you did well! I know they were the highlight of my day!
I pray when my life is over Someone will say "you worked hard to find that little bit of elusive happiness! You found it by yourself and no one pointed it out to you...I'll put a little gold star beside your name!"
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Sitting with the Suffering
Sitting with the Suffering
No one said a word to [Job], because they saw how great his suffering was. Job 2:13
READ Job 2:7-13
“Daddy, my head hurts.” “Daddy, I’m so cold.” “Daddy, can you rub my feet?”
A high fever, chills, and body aches recently descended cruelly upon my teenage daughter. She wanted me to make it better. But mostly she just wanted me near. Eventually we took her to urgent care. “Virus,” we were told. Nothing to do but ride it out.
I sat with my sick girl for hours that day. Rubbing her feet. Getting her medicine. Desperately wanting her to feel better. Occasionally, my selfish side complained, This is hard. Indeed, it is hard to sit with people’s suffering, to witness their hurt up close.
Job’s friends saw his suffering up close too. These three guys are often—fairly!—criticized for their later poor treatment of Job. But it’s easy to forget that, initially, they simply sat with him: “They sat on the ground with him for seven days and seven nights. No one said a word to him, because they saw how great his suffering was” (Job 2:13).
Jobs’ friends remind us that when someone we love is hurting, it’s our presence—our being there, whether we speak or not—that often matters most. Their example reminds us that even though we may not always know what to say, simply sitting with someone in their suffering may be the greatest gift we can give.
By Adam Holz
Our Daily Bread email March 13, 2026
Artwork is signed on bottom right corner. The signature appears to be "Neila Casader".
Monday, March 23, 2026
And that, in itself, is enough ...
It's easy to berate yourself after a crisis ..
'I should have done more' or
'I could have done better' is not an
uncommon feeling after a traumatic event.
However, you have to remind yourself that
you handled whatever you had to deal with,
in the only way you could at the time.
Hindsight, is indeed, a wonderful thing,
but it is also unhealthy to reflect by
imagining a situation could have been
any different than the way it was,
or that there could have
been an alternative outcome if only we had
behaved differently.
Sometimes we just have to accept that
'it is what is is', and move on with peace
and forgiveness in our hearts.
The most important thing is knowing
that you cannot turn back the clock and
change anything and that you did your best.
And that, in itself, is enough ...
by C.E. Coombes
art by Ingrid Jean
Source: Serendipity Corner on Facebook
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Saturday, March 21, 2026
...her whole world
I am 42 years old. And last month, my mother apologized to me for something she should never have had to apologize for.
It was a Tuesday—one of those Tuesdays when you feel like the day is rushing downhill and you just can’t keep up. Work emails kept pouring in, the kids’ notebooks were scattered all over the table, and something in the oven had already started to smell like it was burning.
My mom called me twice. I pressed “decline” both times. I told myself, *“I’ll call her later. I can’t right now.”*
But that “later” kept stretching further and further awaway.
When I finally called her back that night, she answered on the first ring, as if she had been holding the phone in her hand, waiting.
“Oh, hello, my dear! I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to bother you.”
I sighed. I was completely exhausted.
“What’s up, Mom?”
“Oh, nothing… I just couldn’t open a jar. But don’t worry, I managed. Sorry for calling you so much.”
Something in her voice made my chest tighten.
“Mom, why are you apologizing?”
She paused. Then, with her voice slightly breaking, she said:
“It’s just that… I don’t want to be a burden. You have your life, your things, and I… I’m getting old.”
She even let out a nervous little laugh, the kind people use to keep themselves from crying.
“I shouldn’t have bothered you with something as silly as a jar…”
I froze. The noise of the house seemed to suddenly fade away. Her words fell into my stomach like cold stones.
My mother—the woman who worked two shifts to raise me, the one who stayed up whole nights by my bed when I had a fever—was apologizing because she needed help. Because of a jar.
I grabbed my keys and said:
“Mom, I’m coming over right now.”
She got worried.
“No, son! Don’t trouble yourself. Don’t worry about me.”
But I was already in the car.
When I walked into her kitchen, she was sitting at the table with the jar in front of her. There were traces of tears she had tried to wipe away quickly before I could notice.
“Mom,” I said softly, “you never bother me. Never.”
She wiped her eyes and said:
“I just didn’t want to take time away from your work, from your life…”
That sentence completely broke my heart. Because between schedules, deadlines, and commitments, I had forgotten the most important thing:
I forgot that she built her whole life around mine.
I forgot that while my life kept getting louder, hers was becoming quieter.
I forgot that time—the thing I always say I *don’t have*—is the most valuable thing I can give her.
I opened the jar. Easily.
We sat and talked for an hour. Then another. Not about big things, just about the neighbors, about when I was a kid, about a funny commercial she saw on TV. It felt like something inside both of us had thawed.
When I was leaving, she hugged me. Her hands trembled a little.
“Thank you for coming,” she whispered. “I missed you so much.”
At that moment, I made a decision: I will never again let her apologize for growing old.
Now I go see her every week. Without fail. Without needing a “reason.” Sometimes I bring groceries, sometimes a coffee, and sometimes I just go to sit in the kitchen and listen to her.
And every time I leave, she stands at the door waving goodbye until I turn the corner—just like she used to do when I was seventeen and leaving for school.
Because no matter how old we become, for our parents, we are still their whole world.
Source: I'm glad the sky is painted blue on Facebook




