So many of us carry around parts of our past like they’re something to hide. We try to cover up the messy chapters—the ones with heartbreak, abuse, trauma, mistakes, or things we were forced into. The shame creeps in when we think we’re “less than” because of what happened. But that shame isn’t the truth….
Read moreCategory: Raising Humans
Thoughts on parenting that come from presence, not perfection. Here, the focus is on guiding, listening, and learning alongside your children — with honesty, tenderness, and room for mistakes.
Wanting Love Again Doesn’t Make You Weak
There’s a quiet kind of courage in admitting you still want love. Especially after heartbreak. Especially after betrayal, or loneliness, or years of pretending you didn’t need it anymore. Sometimes just whispering the words—“I still want to be loved”—feels like standing naked in the cold. But here’s the truth: wanting love doesn’t make you needy….
Read moreA Good Season, Just As It Is
Today I watched a movie that did something rare—it calmed my nervous system. Boyhood (2014). A slow, grounded film that follows the life of a boy named Mason from age six to the time he joins college. No fantasy, no dramatic music, no violent plot twists or adrenaline-driven scenes. Just ordinary life, unfolding gently and…
Read moreA Good Season, Just As It Is
Today I watched a movie that did something rare—it calmed my nervous system. Boyhood (2014). A slow, grounded film that follows the life of a boy named Mason from age six to the time he joins college. No fantasy, no dramatic music, no violent plot twists or adrenaline-driven scenes. Just ordinary life, unfolding gently and…
Read moreStarting Over Is Not Failure—It’s Nature’s Way of Pruning for Stronger Growth
Sometimes, life asks us to let go of things we once held tightly—dreams, relationships, routines, even parts of ourselves we thought we’d never lose. It can feel like failure, like we’ve done something wrong or missed the mark. But nature tells a different story. In the natural world, pruning isn’t a punishment. It’s a process….
Read moreThe Gate, the Dogs, and the Heartbeat of a Mother
It was such a simple Sunday moment—Gracie and I heading out for choir practice. Our nanny was off for the day, and as usual, I opened the gate myself. I parked the car just outside, planning to lock up quickly and drive off. Nothing out of the ordinary. But then, in a blink, everything changed….
Read moreWealth Grows Slowly, Like Trees—Steady Care Over Time Brings Lasting Abundance
No tree shoots up in a day. It starts as a seed, tiny and unseen. Then it roots itself. Quietly. Patiently. It doesn’t rush, but it doesn’t stop either. Each drop of rain, every hour of sun, every breeze that passes—it takes it all in. And one day, without even realizing, it’s grown strong and…
Read moreTouch, Memory, and Coming Home to Myself
I used to think I didn’t like physical touch. For years, I associated it with discomfort, with feeling unsafe, with wanting to shrink away. I told myself I just wasn’t the kind of woman who craved closeness. I started to believe that something in me had gone cold. But yesterday, I had my hair washed…
Read moreMy Shape Is Not a Failure
There’s a quiet kind of shame we carry when we’ve been taught that our bodies are problems to solve. That every curve, every fold, every inch outside the narrow definition of “acceptable” is somehow wrong. For years, I looked at my shape and thought I had failed—at discipline, at beauty, at being enough. But the…
Read more