Sometimes it feels like everything has burned to the ground—dreams, relationships, plans you held so close. The life you thought you were building suddenly looks unrecognizable. And in those moments, it’s easy to believe it’s all over. That the fire has taken too much. That you can’t start again.
But nature shows us something different.
Forests burn, and still, they return. Slowly. Quietly. Bravely. New shoots break through blackened earth, not despite the fire—but because of it. The blaze clears space for new life. It wakes up seeds that have waited years for their moment. It doesn’t erase what was lost, but it makes way for what can still be.
That’s the kind of strength I’m learning to believe in. Not the kind that avoids pain or pretends it didn’t hurt, but the kind that says: This changed me—and I’m still here. Maybe even more rooted now. Maybe even more honest.
The fire may have stripped everything back, but it didn’t end me. I’m still growing. I’m still reaching for light. And I’ll keep rebuilding—stronger, slower, and more sure of who I am. Just like the forest does.