Tag: #understanding

  • The View from the Fence Line: Finding Hope When the World Whispers War

    The morning air here smells like rain and wet dust. It’s a quiet smell. Out here, where the horizon isn’t interrupted by traffic and tall buildings, it’s easy to trick yourself into believing the world is still simple.

    But then I open my phone.

    The noise is instantly deafening. It’s a symptom of sirens, shouting, and high-steaks warnings. Another border is crossed. Another alliance is fractured. Another headline makes my heart stutter with a terrifying, ancient thought: Could World War III actually happen? Is this how it starts?

    It’s a heavy fear to carry. It’s a vulnerability that lives in your marrow, I am especially feeling it as a woman raising a daughter alone! Every time I watch her accomplish another goal, or laugh at something humorous, a second, darker thought shadows the joy: What kind of world am I leaving her? Can I protect her if the worst happens?

    I am a farmer’s daughter. I was raised to understand the arithmetic of the seasons – that nature doesn’t care about our plans, and that you have to prepare for the storm before it breaks. My father taught me to value the quiet, steady rhythm of the soil. He taught me that resilience isn’t about making the most noise; it’s about having deep roots.

    Right now, my roots feel like the only thing keeping me standing.

    The world is just so loud. It is too busy, too panicked, too filled with manufactured outrage and very real suffering. Living in a rural area used to feel like a complete sanctuary, but today, technology brings the chaos directly into the kitchen. We are marinated in anxiety, and our nervous systems weren’t built to carry the weight of global instability 24/7.

    But out here, I am also learning something about hope.

    Hope in a volatile world is not about toxic positivity. It’s not about ignoring the headlines or pretending the threat isn’t real. That’s dangerously naive.

    True hope – rural hope – is grittier. It’s practical.

    It’s the understanding that while I absolutely cannot control what happens at the United Nations or in foreign capitols, I can control what happens inside my own fence line. I can control the atmosphere of my home. I can choose whether I allow the 24-hour news cycle to steal the peace of my breakfast table.

    The Quiet Rebellion of Peace and Love

    When the world insists on loudness, choosing quiet is a form of defiance.

    When the world screams about power, doubling down on the simple pleasures – the warmth of a mug, the feel of a favorite book, the specific song of the wind through the pines – is a sacred act.

    By focusing on this smaller, tangible world, I am not retreating; I am fortifying. I am creating a lighthouse of sanity for my daughter, a sanctuary where she knows that no matter how chaotic the “Big World” becomes, the “Small World” of our home is safe and grounded.

    This is my act of resistance:

    I will keep planting the garden. I will keep fixing the fence. I will keep teaching my daughter the names of the trees. I will keep showing her that love is stronger than fear.

    The world may be at unrest, but history shows us that even in the darkest times, ordinary life continued. People loved. People created. People planted seeds. They refused to let the storm win.

    So, I will sit on my deck as the sun dips below the horizon, feeling the solid land beneath my feet. It is a frightening time, yes. But it is also a time to remember what is real. And what is real is this quiet, this love, and the enduring hope that, just like my father’s crops, we are tougher than the storm.

  • The Glass Partition

    “The tension between needing solitude and wanting to be seen is like standing behind a one-way mirror: I feel protected because I can see out but no one can see in, yet I find myself pressing my palm against the glass, hoping someone notices the smudge I left behind.”

    It is the “Solitude Paradox” – the fear that being known will ruin your peace, combined with the fear that staying hidden will eventually erase you.

    I am the architect of my own island, I’ve dredged the sand and raised the cliffs until the horizon is nothing but my own reflection. There is a profound mercy in this distance; no one can misread my silence here, no one can clumsy-foot through the garden of my grief. Here, I am the Queen of a quiet country, uninterrupted, unburdened, and untouched.

    But the walls that keep the storm out also keep the warmth from coming in.

    I sit by the window of my own making, watching the world move in blurred streaks of color, and a treacherous thought begins to bloom: Does anyone see the light left on in this room? I want to be discovered, but I don’t want to be hunted. I want someone to find the secret door, but I’m terrified of what happens when the hinges creak open and the dust of my decades is exposed to the air.

    It is an exhausting dance – to pull the blanket of anonymity over my head while secretly praying someone notices the shape I make beneath the covers. I want to be “seen” without having to explain, to be understood without the autopsy of conversation. I am waiting for a ghost who speaks my language, someone who knows that when I say “I need to be alone,” what I am really saying is, “Please stay close enough to hear me if I change my mind.”

    Bravely, I am admitting I want to be “found” while I am actively hiding. It is not a contradiction; it’s a search for a very specific kind of safety – the safety of being truly known by someone who won’t try to “fix” the solitude out of me.