Tag: life reflection

  • Just Another Day

    They say it’s your day—

    like that means something

    you’re supposed to feel.

    Like candles and wishes

    are enough

    to make it matter.

    But it comes

    like any other morning—

    quiet,

    unremarkable,

    the same weight

    waiting for you

    before your feet

    hit the floor.

    Messages trickle in—

    “happy birthday,”

    short, bright,

    easy to send.

    You read them,

    type back something grateful,

    something light,

    something that doesn’t say

    how it actually feels.

    Because how do you explain

    that another year

    doesn’t feel like a celebration?

    That it feels like time passing

    without asking

    if you’re ready for it.

    Like you’re still

    the same person

    trying to figure things out—

    just older,

    just more aware

    of what didn’t turn out

    the way you thought it would.

    There’s no party

    for that.

    No candles

    for the things you lost,

    the versions of yourself

    that didn’t make it here.

    So the day moves on—

    like it always does.

    And you move with it,

    smiling when you need to,

    thanking people

    for remembering.

    But deep down,

    it doesn’t feel like yours.

    It just feels

    like another day

    you survived.

  • Memory

    Memory is a quiet thief,

    slipping through the halls of my mind

    collecting pieces of who I was

    and leaving them in places

    I can’t always reach.

    Some nights they return—

    soft as dust,

    sharp as glass—

    faces I loved,

    moments I meant to keep,

    the echoes of laughter

    that no longer belongs to now.

    I touch them carefully,

    afraid they’ll fade again

    if I breathe too deep.

    But memories never stay

    the way you saved them.

    They shift,

    they dim,

    they soften at the edges

    until they’re more feeling than fact,

    more ache than image.

    Still—

    I hold them close,

    these fragments that made me,

    these ghosts of gentler days.

    Because even when they hurt,

    they remind me

    that I lived.

    And that I loved

    hard enough

    to remember.