The Weather of a Life

“There are seasons inside a life just as there are seasons in the sky and some days bloom like spring, and others arrive with frost before we are ready.”

The Weather of a Life

One morning the sun warms the garden
and you think,
perhaps it is time to plant something new.

The soil is soft,
daffodils lift their yellow faces
as if the earth itself
has decided to smile.

You step outside
and breathe in the promise of the day.

But by afternoon
clouds gather like quiet questions.
Rain arrives without asking permission.
The wind remembers winter.

And you wonder…….

About how life moves……

One moment we feel open,
alive with possibility,
ready to plant new seeds
of who we might become.

The next moment
a chill enters the heart,
responsibilities, expectations,
the long list of things that must be done.

Children to raise, meals to cook and homes to care for.

People who depend on us.

Years pass quietly
inside that rhythm of doing.

And sometimes
we forget to ask

Who is the one
doing all of this living?

We wake one day
and realize,

the weather inside us
has been changing
for a very long time.

Reflection

Life rarely unfolds in a steady climate.

It moves more like spring in a northern place, sunshine one moment, rain the next, frost appearing when we thought winter had already passed.

Many of us were raised to believe we must keep moving forward no matter the weather, we keep the house clean, cook the meals, raise the children, take care of everyone around us. Then we realize the years passed in a quiet rhythm of responsibility.

Sometimes we become so skilled at caring for others that we forget to notice ourselves.

Only later, sometimes decades later, do we begin asking a new question:

Who have I been inside this life?

And perhaps an even gentler question follows:

Who am I becoming now?

For many people, especially later in life, this can feel like standing in a new season, the old rhythms still exist, but something inside begins asking for space, space to listen, explore, and rediscover the self that may have been quietly waiting all along.

There is no rush in this process.
Discovery is not a race.

It is more like watching a garden slowly reveal what has been growing beneath the soil.

You arrive and wonder, now what?

Tomorrow

Tomorrow we will explore another quiet question:

How do we know the difference between living by obligation… and living by the truth of our own heart?

-Kerri-Elizabeth-

The Day of Allowing

“When you stop resisting what you feel, the storm becomes part of the sky.”

This day carries two worlds.

One is quiet, a field wrapped in ferns and trees, where the grass breathes beneath my feet and small wildflowers bow in the breeze. The air holds no hurry, only the slow turning of the sun across the sky. It is a place away from the hum of preparation, away from voices, away from the invisible weight that gathers in the presence of too many expectations.

The other world waits at the lake. There, the water glistens like it is holding its breath, catching light in sharp silver fragments. The sound of laughter drifts across the surface, tangled with movement and unspoken tension. It is close enough to touch, yet far enough that I can step away, returning to the stillness where silence settles like a friend beside me.

Between these two worlds, something significant unfolds. A gathering large enough to stir deep currents, filled with people whose histories are intertwined with mine, some bound by love, others by fracture. There are unspoken allegiances here, silent decisions to stand beside one person by turning away from another. There are those whose eyes meet mine with warmth, and others who cannot look at me at all. Words are not always spoken, yet judgments travel in the tilt of a chin, the pause in a greeting, the space someone leaves between us as they pass.

It is a peculiar vantage point — to be so close I could reach out and touch the edges of it, yet far enough to choose not to step inside. From here I can see the weaving of loyalties and the severing of ties. I can watch the way people navigate the discomfort of proximity, the way some drift toward neutrality while others seem easily pulled by the tide of someone else’s version of the truth.

What might have once been painful has become, in its own way, a blessing. Distance has given me a clearer view of human nature — of how quickly stories can take root, how easily one can become a stranger in a place they once belonged. It has shown me the cost of bending to keep the peace, and the rare beauty of standing still while the world decides where it wishes to place you.

Last night, as we sat talking, we saw what we thought was a distant light. But it was the moon, full and magnificent, pouring its glow through the trees. Its brilliance turned the night into a silver dream, so bright it felt as though it was speaking directly to us.

And what I love most is that my husband is walking his own path through this day, just as I am. We give each other the freedom to feel without asking for explanations. No one tells the other how to stand, how to think, how to carry the weight of this moment. We trust that however the other needs to be is enough. No conditions. No corrections. Just the grace of allowing.

Allowing has become my quiet revolution. If I want cookies for breakfast, I will. If I want to plant flowers with dirt under my nails, I will. If I want to wander in circles or sit perfectly still, I will. If I want to cry until my chest aches, I will. I am learning that feelings are not fires to be put out. They are rivers to be followed, their currents sometimes wild, sometimes slow, but always moving me toward a wider sea.

When I allow myself to feel, the anxiety loosens sooner. The urge to resist fades. Even the ache softens because it is no longer trapped. And sometimes, in the middle of it all, I find beauty I would have missed if I had tried to control the moment. The way the moon’s light slips between branches, the way a fish breaks the surface of the lake, the way the air feels before rain.

So today, I am here. In both worlds. In all my colors. Moving as I need to move. Breathing as I need to breathe. And in the allowing, I find a freedom I have waited my whole life to meet.

I am the field and the lake,

the stillness and the storm,

and I am free to be both.

~Kerri-Elizabeth~