I used to think family and friendship were fixed things. That once someone held a place in your life, they’d always be there — steady, certain, unshakable. But I’ve learned that, like rivers, relationships flow. Some deepen. Some dry up. Some change their course entirely.
There was a time I held on too tightly — to people, to roles, to expectations. I thought letting go meant I’d failed somehow. But nature teaches something else. Trees shed leaves not out of loss, but out of wisdom. To survive. To make space. To prepare for new growth.
Family isn’t always about blood. And friendship isn’t always about longevity. Sometimes, the people who show up for the hardest seasons are not the ones who’ve known you the longest, but the ones who see you most clearly now.
There are friends who’ve quietly stepped back. Others who walked away. And yes, it hurt. Especially when I was going through grief, divorce, and the deep undoing that comes with choosing myself again. But I’ve also met new people — kind, present, open — who offered support without needing me to shrink or perform.
I’ve realized that love that needs me to be small, agreeable, or unchanged isn’t love that can hold me through real life. And family? Family can be complex. It can be warm and safe — or complicated and draining. It’s okay to create boundaries. To choose space. To say, “this dynamic no longer serves who I’m becoming.” That, too, is an act of self-respect.
What I’m learning is this: the right people don’t need me to be perfect. They just need me to be real. And I want to be around people who make room for growth — not just for me, but for themselves too.
These days, I trust connection that feels mutual. Soft. Grounded. I no longer chase belonging in places where I have to abandon myself to be accepted.
Like the earth, I move through seasons. And the people in my life — family or friend — move with me, or they don’t. Either way, I honor the journey. I honor what was. And I welcome what’s unfolding.
Because relationships, like gardens, need tending. And sometimes, the bravest thing you can do is replant yourself in richer soil.