Book Quote of the Week:


The Things I Miss That – I Did Not Realize Were Home



“Sometimes you will never know the value of a moment until it becomes a memory.” -Dr. Seuss

 

My Interpretation: You do not always recognize the softness of your life while you are living it. Some moments only reveal their importance years later, once they are out of reach. Nostalgia is the heart’s way of reminding you where you came from & what shaped you, even when it hurt.


THE THINGS I MISS

THAT I DID NOT REALIZE WERE HOME

There are pieces of my old life

that I did not understand were precious

until I no longer had access to them.

 

Not because they were perfect.

Not because they were gentle.

Not because they were easy.

 

But because they were mine.

 

They were the small, familiar rhythms

that built the background noise of my childhood –

quiet, flawed, messy little anchors

that I did not appreciate

because I was too young to recognize

that ordinary moments fade too.

 

This is the strange part of growing up:

 

You start missing things

you spent years trying to escape.


I MISS THE SOUND OF A FULL HOUSE

Not the chaos.

Not the arguments.

Not the tension that always pushed in from the corners.

 

I miss the feeling of bodies moving through a shared space –

⇒ the doors opening & closing,

⇒ the footsteps,

⇒ the muffled conversations,

⇒ the evidence that life was happening around me

⇒ even when it was not happening for me.

 

It was not safe.

It was not warm.

But it was familiar.

Predictable in its own way.

 

I miss the noise

because silence has a different kind of weight

when the people you once lived with

are not alive anymore.


I MISS THE HOLIDAYS I USED TO COMPLAIN ABOUT

The ones that were loud & dysfunctional

but still had a table full of people.

 

The ones where someone always burned something

& someone always forgot something

& someone always said something wrong

but everyone showed up

even if no one knew why.

 

I did not know back then

that one day

there would not be enough people left

to fill a room.

 

Now I understand:

 

You do not miss the perfection.

You miss the presence.


I MISS BEING A VERSION OF MYSELF

WHO DID NOT KNOW LOSS THIS INTIMATELY

There were years

where I did not walk into every holiday

with ghosts following behind me.

 

Years where I did not brace for grief

in the middle of something meant to feel joyful.

Years where I did not do mental math

about whom will not be there

or who will cancel last-minute

or who I am pretending I do not miss.

 

I miss the girl

who did not scan rooms for absence.

 

She was naive,

but she was not haunted.


I MISS KNOWING WHERE I BELONGED

EVEN IF THE PLACE WAS NOT GOOD FOR ME

 

There is a strange comfort

in having a designated place in the world –

even if it was a painful one.

 

✍︎ You know the rules.

✍︎ You know the rhythms.

✍︎ You know what version of yourself is expected.

 

Leaving that place

is freedom

but it is also disorientation.

 

✘ I do not miss the harm.

✘ I do not miss the dynamic.

✘ I do not miss the old life.

 

But I miss being someone

who did not have to rebuild a sense of belonging

from the ground up.


NOSTALGIA IS A LIAR

BUT IT’S ALSO A HISTORIAN

 

Nostalgia edits memories

like it is trying to save your heart from breaking twice.

 

It softens the edges.

It adds warmth to cold places.

It turns background noise into comfort

& chaos into something almost endearing.

 

But beneath the lie

is a truth:

 

Every version of you

was just trying to survive with what you had.

 

You miss things

because they were yours –

not because they were good.

 

& that is okay.

 

Missing something does not mean you want it back.

It means it mattered.


THE HEAD-TILT TRUTH

People will tilt their heads

when you admit you miss things

that were not healthy

or comforting

or good.

 

Let them.

 

They do not understand

what it means to outlive an entire chapter of your life

& still ache for the parts that shaped you –

even the painful ones.

 

You are not longing for the past.

You are honoring the pieces that built you.

 

Some things you miss

because they were home

before you learned how to build a better one.

 

Xoxo

Current Playlist:

Whisper to the ghosts. Yell into the void. Just don’t be an asshole.