Category: becoming

  • Outlaw

    She was born with dust on her boots

    and trouble in her shadow—

    the kind of trouble

    that follows you slow,

    like it knows

    you’ll never shake it loose.

    They call her an outlaw,

    but she never meant to be one.

    Life just taught her early

    that some roads ain’t straight,

    and some sins

    don’t wash off easy.

    She’s ridden through towns

    that whispered her name

    like a warning,

    like a prayer,

    like a story told

    to keep children indoors.

    She’s stolen time,

    not gold—

    running from the woman she was

    toward the woman she might be,

    hoping the distance between them

    counts for something.

    Nights get long on the run.

    The moon watches everything,

    silent as a judge

    with a tired heart.

    But still, she rides—

    not for glory,

    not for fear,

    but because the horizon

    has a way of calling someone

    not yet ready

    to stop fighting her own ghost.

    Maybe outlaw’s just another word

    for someone who keeps moving

    when the world tries

    to pin her down.

    And if that’s a crime—

    then let the dust

    be her alibi.

  • Something Beautiful

    Something beautiful

    is happening

    where no one can see it.

    Not in the loud places

    that beg to be noticed,

    not in the moments

    people photograph

    to prove they were happy—

    but in the quiet work

    of a heart

    learning how to stay soft

    after being broken open.

    It’s in the way you breathe now,

    a little slower,

    like you’re no longer

    trying to outrun

    your own life.

    It’s in the small mercies

    you used to ignore—

    morning light

    resting on the floor,

    a song finding you

    at the exact right second,

    the strange relief

    of realizing

    you survived again.

    Nothing dramatic.

    Nothing the world would clap for.

    Just the slow return

    of gentleness

    to places that forgot

    it was allowed to live there.

    And maybe

    that’s what beautiful really is—

    not perfection,

    not happiness

    that never breaks,

    but the quiet decision

    to keep opening your hands

    to the light

    even after

    everything tried

    to teach you

    to close them.

    Something beautiful

    is happening.

    And this time,

    it’s you.