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  • "To the Dad Who Loves Unconditionally"

    Dear Dad,

    On this Father’s Day, I wanted to share a message of love and appreciation with you. Thank you for everything we have been through together. Through the ups and downs, I’m grateful that you’ve always been there for me and have never let me down.

    I know I haven’t always turned out to be the person you might have hoped for, but I appreciate that you didn’t hold anything against me. Instead, you gave me a chance to learn and grow, even when you disagreed with my choices. Your acceptance means so much to me.

    I cherish all the conversations we’ve had while I was growing up. While you are my dad, as I got older, you also became an example of how a partner should be to me. Your actions and the way you treat others, especially women, show your kindness and dedication to making people happy. That is truly special.

    I love the father figure you’ve become, and anyone would be lucky to have you as a dad. Please don’t ever change the wonderful person you are. I want you to know that, no matter what I do in life, I will always be your daughter. Although I may not be able to do much for you this Father’s Day, I hope this message and letter brighten your day.

    With love,
    Your Daughter
    Samantha

    Samantha Anthony

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    • This is a beautiful and heartfelt letter, Samantha! Your dad is incredibly lucky to have such a loving and appreciative daughter. The depth of your gratitude and the specific examples you shared truly highlight the strong bond you share. Your words are sure to bring him immense joy and make this Father’s Day extra special. He’s clearly a…read more

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  • "Embracing Change: A Journey of Love and Growth"

    To my oldest daughter,

    You’re approaching a significant milestone this year, and I can hardly believe you are getting ready to turn 15 and start your freshman year of high school. I want you to know that, despite the long and difficult journey we’ve shared, my love and feelings for you will never change.

    I admit that I made some mistakes when I was younger and that I wasn’t fully prepared to be a mother. However, my experiences with you and your siblings have helped me make better choices for you. I want you to know that I will be here for you as much as I can to support you in your career choices and make that next phase easier for you.

    As your birthday approaches and you continue to blossom into a young woman, remember that you are ready for whatever comes your way. No matter what you choose to pursue, I will love you unconditionally. Even though I may not be around 24/7, I’m just around the corner.

    I love you.
    Your Mother

    Samantha Anthony

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    • This is a beautiful letter! Your love and dedication shine through every word. It’s wonderful that you’re acknowledging past challenges while focusing on your unwavering support for your daughter. Your commitment to being there for her, even if not constantly present, is incredibly reassuring and speaks volumes about your strength as a mother.…read more

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  • Two Wolves Connected By Love & Hardships

    Dear Unsealers, this is a story about a girl who started her school journey with many possibilities until she found the one piece that changed her life forever.

    Sammie was in the process of just starting her sophomore year at high school. She ended up finding herself a whole new bunch of friends, activities, a whole new bunch of choices that she overwhelmed herself at first but she figured out she was going to just wing it and see what she could get into even though her freshman year didn’t start too great after her relationships got the best of her but she thought to herself not to worry there were new things out there to explore so she didn’t mind what she was going to endure next. She couldn’t believe that after her classes were set in and everything, how the lunch program was set up with different times, it was like, well, why can’t everyone in the school eat together, but they say there’s not enough time during classes for everyone to be put together. Anyway, besides her exploring the different outcomes for friends she ended up one day during an afternoon recess she was chatting with one of her friends and she stumbles across the gym and saw a bunch of students playing around in the gym she assumed it was p.e class but she for a split second something caught her eye and her friend was wondering Sammie who are you starring at and she told her that she was looking at someone that piqued her interest and she asked her friend who was he? Do you know anything about him? She started laughing and telling me things about him, but we ended up getting caught by Zack and one of his friends looking at us was wondering who that girl was staring at me and why. We started leaving from the gym doors, and she kept thinking to herself Wow, I like the way he looks, his smile, and laid back personally. She wanted to know, but she wasn’t sure where to start. She ended up, however, getting lucky in the next few days. Zack and Sammie ended up reconnecting during a PE class together and had to spend it outside on their course track. They started talking as they were walking towards the bleachers they couldn’t believe they were laughing about how they kept looking at each other and she started spilling her guts about how she makes her feel cute and attractive, and the other things about him that made her light up but she started to notice how he would just sit there smiling, blushing with everything she said and he started muttering about his life talking about what he likes and so forth. As they were walking they were discussing if they wanted to begin something but they weren’t sure but she felt something starting to happen inside of her and she decided to go through it but she, however, wasn’t sure if he had every intention as she did but after a long talk they decided to start dating on what they noticed was funnier they ended up looking at the time when they walked back to the class that it was their friend’s birthday today so they said look our anniversary will always be April 24th after that they ended up being inseparable. They both started every day by talking, texting, hanging out, you know the drill, but they ended up hitting a huge snag during school time. She ended up figuring out she wanted more of the relationship. She wanted to always be around him, and she wanted to get to know more about him, but she noticed, especially after he graduated from school 2 years later, that the attraction started dying down, and she wanted to know why. She found out at first that his family was working all the time and he wasn’t old enough to drive yet, so she figured that he couldn’t see me as much, so she brushed it off her shoulder for now, but as time went more, they were happy together. Even though at the time he was working she felt like he made the time the best he could to see her, call her, and text her it was like she was doing all the work including having to get in the middle of his parents and his cousin to spend time with him cause she was in the same predicament at the time he was the only flaw on her end was she was living with her parents at the time and even she had no way to get to her love so want she wanted to explore more and open into she couldn’t get her answers. So, during her last round of school, she made the worst decision to drop out of school even though her peers and teachers kept putting the idea and guilt in her head that she was so close to finishing Sammie was determined after failing her 1st 6weeks course and her senior project scared her into finishing her school year. Even though later on she admitted to Zack that he was the main reason why she left school. She said she felt that he was a big piece of her life, and since that was the only way they could honestly see each other and spend time with him, that was the only way their connection got stronger. She felt that since he was gone, she couldn’t focus on what was more important to her. So she ended up dropping out of high school and tried to focus on her next choices for her life, but she mostly paid attention to how to figure out how to spend more time with Zack while he was struggling with his work and family. As time went by, Sammie ended up losing her home, and she had to go to a program with included housing, and at the time, as she was working on herself, she was mostly focused on more of her relationships. She was still having problems with Zack. She ended up finding out more information about him than she ever prepared herself for. As it turns out Sammie’s identity that Zack knew about surfaced to his family and they weren’t happy that he wanted to be with someone like her so in time she noticed that things were drifting more apart once she confronted him about why he told her that I wasn’t really happy being with you my family said that you should only love me no one else I wasn’t ready to communicate with you, move in, or anything. I wasn’t ready to give up everything I had for you. Sammie dropped everything suddenly and was thinking a lot, but ended up saying what she felt. How could you say that? I did my best to be with you. I wanted us to spend more time together, spend nights together, and see how things with us were going to be being around each other more to see if we were ready to expand further, that’s all she wanted, but that wasn’t the case for him. So, after heated words were thrown around, we decided after 3 years to end everything and just be friends. Sammie ended up resenting him for a while, but something in her heart cared about him so much that she always ended up talking to him and checking on him every day as they both moved on with their lives. During their time apart, they ended up going through different locations and different people, and even brought new additions to their lives, but something ended up tying them back together. She ended up after a hurricane destroyed her life. She ended up one day going to visit Zack at his new location to find out that he was just living his life day by day. He was doing alright, just working and taking care of his new children. She sat down and explained to him everything she was going through and what her next steps were after the hurricane she endured blew through everything she was taught, she had, and everything was shattered. They talked about possibly reconnecting, but this time, everything was drawn out to make sure this was what they wanted to do. She wasn’t sure what he was thinking, even though he said everything about how he was feeling about it. They decided to leave everything that they had dealt with behind and started to try again. She couldn’t believe that everything was going to fall back into place. She kept running thoughts through her head like were things going to be different this time Were our connection that we have going stronger Were we going to be happy together were we able to produce our family Further Many questions were soaring through her mind but her worst part came true when she was making her dreams happen the hurricane came back through and it was trying to destroy everything more Sammie was trying to do to make it come true but the rain from the storm was manipulating everything in place. Zack went in and protected her by blowing through the storm and helped Sammie move everything in and get them set up for the next questions in her journey. As to this day, they have moved to another location, added a furball addition to their journey, and they are going on 19 years of best friend relationship and 3 years of a connecting marriage.

    Samantha Anthony

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    • Sammie’s story is a testament to resilience and the power of connection. Her journey, though challenging, showcases her strength in overcoming obstacles and finding her way back to love and happiness. It’s inspiring to see how she persevered through hardship, learned from her experiences, and ultimately found a fulfilling path. Her story is a…read more

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  • Being my moon

    Dear mom,

    You’ve known me the longest. You had a big role in making me. I was one part you and one part Dad. One part breath, one part earth. Your womb was the kiln I found my true form in.

    I was one of 3, byt you always made me feel like the top of that triangle, the high point of our five-pointed star.

    I remember you bought the anthology of young writers when, in 5th grade, my poem about winter was published in it.

    You knew I’d get into Luther, but you forced, forced me to choose a back up school. Still believing while going over my financial package, with Dad, on our Windows desktop in the living room, that I could make that driftless dream come true.

    After coming home from our church’s mission trip to Juarez, I thought you didn’t take me seriously when I said I wanted to go into the Peace Corps after college. But when I was boarding the plane to South Africa wearing my life-sized backpacking backpack, I knew your tears were partly of maternal pride.

    You were there when I was in-patient and cracked jokes about the hospitilization experience. How the little library on the ward had barely any books and included the Uglies series and The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People.

    You were there when I became a teachers, got my masters and licensure in a year. You were right there cheering me on as I moved from school to school, tirelessly looking for my teaching home.

    And you supported me as I published my book of poetry, and pitched it to an editor. You always listened to my words and said they always struck you as insightful and inspiring. I knew I always had an audience.

    Now, I’ve learned that you’d still be with me, be my bright shining moon, in the darkest of nights. When I was a way from home, you always said to look for the moon and know that you’d be looking at the same moon.

    When you got cancer, I knew I had to keep looking for the moon, for myself and for you.

    The moon is always in the sky, no matter the stormy weather. You held the moon in the sky for me so I could always find my way, even if the path led far from home, or from what I thought home was.

    For always being my moon, I love you.

    Danielle Koch

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    • Aww your mom sounds like an absolutely wonderful mother and person. I am sure she is so proud of you! And you fill her heart ad life with so much joy. I hope your mom is felling as well as possible. Thank you for sharing this beautiful piece with us and thank you for being part of The Unsealed. <3 Lauren

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  • Heather shared a letter in the Group logo of To the people we loveTo the people we love group 2 months, 1 weeks ago

    Just Us Three

    Let’s go back to those nights of walking the neighborhood.
    Of riding our bikes thru that same neighborhood bypassing the “scary” street.
    Let’s go back to sitting in front of the TV playing video games til the sun comes up.
    Go back to the days of driving around feeling like grown adults.
    Let’s go back to those day trips that consist of music blaring thru the speakers. Our voices singing as loud as they can.
    Go back to the nights of just us girls & the open road which led us to the unknown.
    Let’s go back to those nights in our 20s of just dancing the night away with no cares in the world.
    With the only thought of “will it be mimis or dennys” after the night is done.
    Let’s go back to girls night in.
    Banging drums. Tapping the microphone. & strumming the guitar.
    Can we go back and just live for the moment?
    For the simplicity.
    For the joy.
    Can we go back & just enjoy being present?
    No rush for the next task.
    No responsibilities that will consume our time.
    Can we go back & just be?
    Let’s go back & see.
    Just us three.

    Heather

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    • Aww, Heather this is so sweet. Looking back on childhood memories like this can be sad at times, but it just proves how much fun you had. You are so blessed to have had a childhood like this ☺

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  • My Letter 2 Music

    Dear Music,

    You have been my first love, my most loyal companion, and my greatest storyteller. Before I even knew how to express myself fully, you spoke for me. You carried my joy, my pain, my anger, and my healing in melodies, in beats, in lyrics that felt like they were written just for me.
    When the world felt too loud, you gave me rhythm. When silence was too heavy, you filled it with sound. You have never judged me for how I felt-you simply embraced me, wrapped me in harmonies, and let me be.
    You have been my bridge to places I have never been, to people I have never met. You break barriers, crossing languages and cultures, bringing souls together in a way nothing else can. Through you, strangers have become family, and stories have been passed down like sacred traditions.
    Whether I was dancing in joy, drowning in sorrow, or standing in quiet reflection, you have always been there. Guiding me. Holding me. Reminding me that I am not alone.
    Thank you for your presence in every stage of my life. For being my escape, my therapy, my celebration. Thank you for giving me the courage to tell my own stories. I will always love you. I will always need you.

    Forever Yours,
    AmbitiousBMarie

    AmbitiousBMarie

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    • Music has a way of helping us through our struggles like nothing else can, whether we realize it or not. If I am feeling broken and I listen to a specific song, sometimes it has the power to give me the strength to repair myself. If my heart is aching, a few ballads help me remember that I am not alone. I am glad that music has such an impact on…read more

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  • Sam Harty shared a letter in the Group logo of To the people we loveTo the people we love group 4 months ago

    This post is viewable by the Unsealed community only.

    Ocean

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  • a journal on familial bonds

    dec 11
    a journal on familial bonds.
    the oddities in which the preservation of familial bonds has brought is an interesting notion worth unpacking. I keep one pillow sheet on a pillow here, and one there. as the matching florals bring comfort to both homes I go to. I use the locker in the gym of my father’s favorite number, as the unification of father and daughter presents itself in strange ways. but I somehow feel closer knowing my stuff is protected by him despite the distance. 3:33 is my favorite time to present each day as my mom and I share that in common, and I’m under the belief it keeps us closer. every store I go into, I’m on the lookout for new hello kitty themed items, as my sister recently took on the fascination for the cartoon that made an impact on a portion of my childhood too. as she grows older, our age gap seems to close, as if to be an illusion, as we begin to look more alike. I love that we carry each other with us every day.

    I spend the days looking for ways to feel closer to my family, even though our distance keeps me humble.

    growing up, I loved sitting in the kitchen with my dad as he would cook dinner. I learned a lot during those times. funny enough, my favorite thing I learned to cook from him was his scrambled eggs in the bowl passed down from my grandma. it’s the scrambled egg bowl. one day I’ll buy a bowl just to scramble my eggs in, but for now I’ll reminisce on that bowl knowing my eggs will never scramble as well as they do inside that bowl. he also taught me the importance of the preparation the night before. for anything, but specifically, he loves to prepare his coffee the night before for an easier wake up. I think a warm cup of coffee ready to go is a good reason to get out of bed in the morning, too.

    I go through days holding onto random parts of the things that remind me of family, of the love we hold. for familial love is not one easy to replicate. and I don’t bother to replicate it, I spend my time attempting its infiltration into my daily life. to bring the love with me.

    I am a mosaic of the people I love. pieces of them make up me and falter a greater sense of who I am. as I am only me because those who brought me here.

    ava lawrey

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    • This was so beautiful and heartwarming to read. Family bond is so important especially nowadays as times get tougher! I’m so happy for you that you still experience family traditional history and still hold a tight bond with your family!

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      • thank you<3 this year i have been craving as much family time as possible. i couldn't wait to move out on my own and it's so bittersweet

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  • taysleatherlace shared a letter in the Group logo of To the people we loveTo the people we love group 6 months ago

    #What's Your Love Story/ Part 1

    Dear Unsealer’s,
    # What’s your love story
    part 1

    Originally Recorded February 2020 By: Taylor Vance
    Our love Story began over a year ago at a point in my life when I thought my ability to love someone else was gone. Being a widow with two children was what I believed the rest of my life would always be not ever knowing or sharing true love again. This love came on blind, unexpected & pure. Not out of pity & without judgement which brought light back into my life. He gave me the opportunity to see and experience things I only dreamed of, but thought I would never do. Him well he was a Gypsy roaming wild and free, me well I was the pioneer never to venture too far away from home or family. He was excited to show & share his ways & worldly experiences with me mostly, more than he even knew he reminded me to LIVE & LOVE life again. I am very thankful GOD sent me a good man with only good intentions for myself and my children. I found this quote that resonates with me how I feel our relationship came to be & is the base of which we began on January 5,2019.

    “Maybe she needed HIM to show her how to LIVE and Maybe he needed HER to show him how to LOVE”

    ONE YEAR DOWN, FOREVER TO GO

    love Taylor 2-2020
    Taylor & Shane 2019

    NOT THE END, INSTEAD TO BE CONTINUED…….

    Taylor Vance

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    • So beautiful Taylor! I’m so happy you have found someone who accepts you for who you are and you were able to see the light at the end of the tunnel. I love the picture of you two also. So beautiful. Love can be a beautiful thing. I’m still learning as a young mother so thank you for sharing your peace and giving others hope!

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  • A Journey of Hope and Adoption

    The story begins with an ordinary day, a simple act of showing up. I walked into a speech therapy session, my mind preoccupied with the familiar routine. But that day, the routine was interrupted.

    A beautiful foster mom sat in the foyer of her warm, life-filled home. Her children ran and played nearby, their laughter filling the room. As I stepped in, I was welcomed into their family’s village, embraced by their kindness and warmth. As I settled in, she asked a question that would change the course of our lives forever:

    “Do you know anyone that might be able to adopt?”

    It felt like time stopped. The words echoed in my heart, touching a place I hadn’t dared to let hope visit for years. It was as if a seed of possibility was being planted. Little did I know, the answer to her question would become the answer to a prayer written years before, tucked away in my husband’s gratitude journal since 2016. Yet, this happened on November 17, 2020.

    Four years earlier, he had written, “Lord, if it’s Your will, bring forth a son.” I had no idea he’d written that prayer—not just once, but on every single page of his gratitude journal. And unbeknownst to him, he didn’t know how many nights I had spent crying out to God, aching for the child we had yet to hold.

    The journey began quietly, like the unfolding of a miracle too big to see all at once. Over the next nine months, we walked a path full of hope, paperwork, and prayer, not realizing how beautifully orchestrated it all was. The moment finally came on a day already heavy with meaning—a day tied to both sorrow and healing.

    It was a due date I had carried in my heart for years, tied to a miscarriage that had once left me shattered. But it was also the very same day we stood before a judge, holding hands, and became the parents of the most beautiful boy—our son.

    God had taken the broken pieces of my story and made something beautiful. What once was a date of mourning became a day of indescribable joy. He had turned my sorrow into joy in a way I never imagined possible.

    Fifteen years of tears fell in that virtual courtroom, but they were no longer tears of grief. They were tears of gratitude, awe, and love for the child we were finally able to call our own.

    For anyone who knows the void of infertility, who feels the ache of unfulfilled longing, I want you to know this: your story isn’t over. There is still hope. The journey may not look the way you imagined, and it may take longer than your heart feels it can bear, but miracles have a way of finding us when we least expect them.

    Sometimes, they come through a foster family asking a question. Sometimes, they come through a prayer written quietly in a journal. And sometimes, they come on the very day you thought joy was impossible.

    Hold on. There is still hope. YOUR STORY IS NOT OVER!

    Question
    “If the deepest pain you’ve experienced was meant to prepare you for a purpose greater than you imagined, how might that change the way you view your journey?”

    Beyond Barriers by Rachel

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    • This really warmed my heart. I am so happy that you and your husband could find happiness gain the beautiful blessing that your husband has preached for. Your son is so blessed to have come across great parents who prayed for this moment. Thank you for sharing your challenges and how you over conquered the tribulations. This is such an inspiring…read more

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  • To Myself, With Gratitude

    Thank you for seeing the light in others,
    Even when they only cast shadows over you.
    For holding onto love, despite the cracks,
    For believing in its power, even when it broke you.

    Thank you for cherishing beauty in the world,
    Even when the mirror refused to reflect it back.
    For still standing, still breathing, still hoping,
    When life handed you reasons to fall apart.

    Thank you for rising from every tumble,
    For trusting in the divine process of growth.
    For embracing the seasons of solitude,
    Letting transformation carve your soul anew.

    Thank you for choosing to love yourself,
    For recognizing the strength in your heart.
    For seeing the brilliance within your spirit,
    And refusing to mirror the hurt you’ve endured.

    You are the masterpiece shaped by storms,
    A testament of resilience and grace.
    I thank you, dear self, for never giving up,
    For holding onto faith, love, and your radiant place.

    Anita A Williams

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  • Letter to myself

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  • Dear Young Ash — Please Come Out of Your Cage

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  • Hey, so we like girls?

    Dear little Chloe,

    I’m just gonna rip the Bandaid off quickly, and I apologize because I know you were always more of a peel-the-Bandaid kind of girl. But trust me that it’s easier if I just tell you that you’re a lesbian.

    Yeah, you heard me right.

    I’m not sure if you even know what being a lesbian means, I know Mom and Dad never talked to you about sexuality or the queer community, they always just assumed you would grow up, fall in love, and marry a man. Being a lesbian is no different, you grow up, fall in love, but you fall in love with a woman.

    And no, there’s nothing wrong with that, despite what you’ve been told.

    I know you’ve had trouble being vulnerable with your feelings, expressing what’s going on inside your head, and being honest with yourself. I know that you feel the need to suppress the love you have towards others, and God, I know you have so much love in your heart to give.

    I know that deep down in your introverted soul, you want to experience love one day. You long for having someone to love, and to receive that kind of love back. I know you search for it, filling your daydreams with this boy or that boy, and you think you like them because boys are the only thing you know to associate with love. The possibility of love with a girl has never crossed your mind.

    But, do you remember Jackie? The girl you met in your karate class? You hated karate because it required too much yelling and that clashed with your quiet personality. You quit after three classes, but you didn’t stop thinking about Jackie. You wanted to be her “best friend,” she was the only thing you looked forward to in that karate class.

    Or the girl named Carly in your cooking class you took when you were about eight? I know you were flustered when she gave you a hug on the last day of class, and you thought about the hug in the backseat of Mom’s car on the way home.

    What about Avery, the girl in your drama class? You wanted to get to know her better, so you would try to sit next to her in class and talk to her during breaks. You didn’t know why you were so drawn to her or why you didn’t have a crush on any boy during middle school.

    You finally figured it out in high school, with this girl Avalon. She was older than you and funnier than you, which is a rare occurrence because you’re pretty damn funny. But, it drew you towards her, you found her alluring, magnetic in a way. She was everything to you, you aspired to be her, but you aspired for more, you just couldn’t put your finger on what. It clicked one day after having a conversation with her, you had never felt so seen before. You finally came to terms that you liked her, and yes, you liked a girl.

    Love with women comes easy to you, you don’t even have to try. They take your breath away, they mystify you, they’re like a challenge. Tough, but once you figure them out, rewarding. And when you fall for a girl, you fall hard. It’s unlike anything you have ever felt from a boy.

    I’m not saying it was that easy, though, in fact it was difficult on you. You faced a lot of self-doubt in your feelings rather than just trusting your gut. You tried to bottle up the feelings towards her, shove them in a dark corner in your mind, or forget about them. Pardon my language because I know you don’t like when people use profanities, but there was no way in hell that you could make your feelings for her go away. They were undeniable, unlike anything you have ever felt for a boy before. It was like an epiphany.

    It was harder for you to even consider telling other people. What would people think about you? Would they think differently of you or talk behind your back? What would your family think? You love your family, and you didn’t want to mess up your relationship with them by telling them this new information about yourself.

    Remember to take a breather. It’s okay to be nervous.

    I’ll tell you this, we took it one step at a time.

    Turns out, people are pretty accepting, and that’s something to be grateful for, because this isn’t the case for most gay people. You told our little sister first, she barely batted an eye, and you cried in the bathroom after. But, you cried happy tears.

    You told two of your cousins next, and turns out one of them also likes girls. The other gave you a fist bump. You went home with a smile on your face.

    And then you started to tell your friends, friends who were close to you and who you could trust. They only smiled and said, “Wait, really?” You said yes, you liked girls, and they were like “Me too!”

    Finally, you told Mom. She called you over the phone and you cried happy tears because she wasn’t upset with you like you thought she would be. People can surprise you sometimes. She even apologized if she ever said anything insensitive, and said that she loved you regardless. It’s not so scary once you put yourself out there. Yes, not everybody is going to be accepting of you, but I suppose that’s a way to see who your real friends are, and who you can depend on and trust. Because good people will love you no matter who you fall in love with.

    If I had to give you any advice, I would tell you to go easy on yourself and to acknowledge your feelings. It’s okay to feel ways that other people don’t and it’s okay to love who you want to love. There is nothing wrong with who you love and how you express love.

    I’m sure you’re thinking about what God has to say about us, and honestly we’ll never really know. But, the God I believe in made us the way that we are for a reason, and He has so much love for us because loving who we want doesn’t make us bad people. We were born this way, and there isn’t anything we can do to change the way we are. So no, we’re not going to hell because we want to kiss girls.

    But, I’d like to leave you with a good note. Being part of the queer community is a beautiful thing, as silly as it may sound to you. I know you’re going to grow up learning that being gay should not be part of your lifestyle, it’s something that you shouldn’t support, and something you’re going to learn to look down upon as a Christian. But, there’s real beauty in the community and something so liberating about identifying as queer. There’s something so remarkable about queer friendships and relationships that I can’t quite articulate in the form of words.

    But yeah, I just wanted you to know that you’ll be okay. I love you, take your time, and you’ll see the light at the end of the tunnel. I love you, little C. Be kind to yourself.

    Love, big C.

    Chloe S.

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    • Chloe, this is such a heartwarming story. Too often, we hear stories about people being ridiculed and berated for coming out, so it is refreshing to hear that you found acceptance and encouragement from those you love! I’m sure that being in your shoes, especially as an adolescent, was so hard. I’m so glad that you found the light at the end of…read more

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      • Thank you for your kind words, Emmy, I deeply appreciate them! Through writing I hope to give inspiration to queer people to come out or feel safe and seen within the community, and I am glad that you found this heartwarming 🙂

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    • Aww Chloe, I am so glad you received such a loving and kind response when you came out. That warms my heart. <3 Lauren

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  • You Should Know That

    The first thing you should know, Jasmine, is that you are so full of love and light that the waters of your love threaten to drown you in its depths. You spend your days treading the waves constantly, just barely keeping your head above the surface. Ebbing. Flowing. Searching for a vessel to pour yourself into and lighten your load.

    You should know that your power lives here. In the billowing floods of tears at the prospect of your greatest fear: abandonment.

    It will take a grueling 10 years of isolation for this to change, but it is in this isolation that you’ll excite yourself in other ways, through a discovery of a world that exists beyond the local AMC theatre or the rollerink you’re never invited to.

    The shelter you created for yourself out of fictional worlds, boyband lore, and a brief obsession with John Hughes films– is only temporary. The ache to be known and understood will return, as it always does. You will hate this part of yourself, but it will fester and grow nonetheless.

    The feeling will persist even once we reach high school and are granted the popularity we craved for so long after the years of rejection. You will succeed in most things, and it will create a new fear in you. A fear of losing it all one day. A fear of disappointing the people you love. A fear of being known as anything besides this new, carefully crafted persona.

    You should know that throughout all of this, the universe has been watching you blossom, beaming down at its beautiful flower child as you shed your petals and grew them anew season after season.

    One day you’ll call out to the universe for a lesson to help you understand why the fear won’t go away.

    And in answer, the universe sent us a man so beautiful and broken it knew we would never be able to resist the call to action. The urge to lick his wounds and patch his ego back together so that he could be the man we dreamed of. We poured ourselves into him and over him to be his champion in the war he’d waged against himself. We stepped out from behind our crooked shield, swimming head to toe in oversized rusted armor and brandished the all too heavy sword of our love upwards at the heavens to prove ourselves.

    Because our devotion to the sick, the weak, the needy, has always overshadowed our devotion to ourselves. As if our worth couldn’t exist alone. Because we believed that deep down, the secret to a perfect world, was that everyone should simply exist in service of those who need it most. And the universe, all knowing as it is, knew that the only way I’d give up this belief in self sacrifice was if it taught me what the best and the worst of humanity can look like in the lesson that was Him.

    There was a time where He would have destroyed us. Where we would have been so desperate for Him to see the pain He’d inflicted that we would have abandoned our self image in pursuit of revenge. Painted our face until we no longer hated the watery eyes staring back at us in the mirror. Starved ourselves skinny and stripped ourselves bare to expose this stranger’s body to the men we’d never risk exposing our heart to again. We’d reign terror and spit venom until the memory of Him came creeping back in. Then we’d crawl back to him on bruised knees and beg for salvation.

    But, luckily, this was not the first time the Universe has tried to teach us this particular lesson. We failed the first time, to choose ourselves. Because you are me and I am you and I was so desperate to protect you from my loneliness, I looked the devil in his eyes and pleaded with him, as his hands tightened around my neck until my vision dulled, to love me. Please love me.

    We were strong this time, Jasmine. We turned to the sky and asked the stars what to do about Him and they answered us, as they always do. The wind came down and dried our tears and whistled in our ear to simply let go and trust in them. And we did.

    And despite it all we still love in spite of the love we never felt. We smile at strangers, and text people photos of rainbows we see outside, and tell the people we love that we love them every single time we feel it. There are still trials and tribulations and tears and sorrow. But when I talk to the universe, it talks back to me. And we will never be alone again.

    Jasmine Belfast

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    • Jasmine, this is such a powerful and moving letter to yourself. I think that we all craft personas that we try to uphold, but sometimes, we are meant for better things! People who love hard in the way you do put their hearts at risk, but luckily, those hearts are usually strong enough to survive the break. I am glad that you are strong enough to…read more

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    • Oh, Jasmine, I am so sorry to hear about the struggles you have had to endure, but I am so inspired that you have not let the darkness you have experienced around you dim the light within you. Sending hugs. Thank you for sharing and thank you for being part of The Unsealed.<3 Lauren

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    • Proud of you for overcoming!

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    • Wow. What a beautiful piece. You’ve captured such a story in your words. I hope you continue to pour into your cup. As a forever “recovering” people pleaser, your words hit home. Hugs to you if that is okay.

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    • To be young gifted and black. You know who you are now continue to walk in yourself worth. Diamonds and pearls

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  • I Am a Masterpiece

    A Girl with a Watering Can by Pierre-Auguste Renoir is the most vivid of my childhood memories. Mounted on the living room wall, I would lie on the floor and stare intently at the blond-haired, blue-eyed girl attired in my favorite hue and transport myself to that ethereal garden. I longed to be standing amid the colors of our creator, engaging in the tranquil scene where life seemed simple. A watering can and flowers, listening to the birds sing where monsters didn’t roam.  
    The delicate balance of staying present but sending my thoughts to wander where I’m not that little girl whose innocence was lost.  I belonged there, standing with confidence that I was protected from seeing the world with ghosts that forever linger in my memories.  The scene calmed my desire to disappear as a teen when I opened the door and welcomed yet another attack on my young body.  If I closed my eyes tight enough, I could smell the fresh scent of spring and breathe out the marred reflection of my battered soul.  
    Were the angels crying when they saw the destruction of my once fearless spirit?  My heart drops when my mind retraces the hours spent secluded in unwanted noise.  The endless nightmares that interrupt my slumber and consume the midnight hours with fear, the flashbacks and panic that attack without warning. 
    One moment can alter the trajectory of one’s destination in life.  For me, this moment lifted the fog I had been existing in for more than three decades. The veil came off. One person’s presence in my life, though they may not have realized it, was a turning point that awakened me to my value and deservingness of a more fulfilling existence.  My angel on earth who reminded me of my worth. Conversation without judgment, presence without pretense, and love without condition became the key that had been lost and could now open the lock to restore what had been hidden.  The revelations that came with that were eye-opening. The beginning of everything that was buried. Years of collecting dust brought me to this uncomfortable yet necessary pivotal moment in my life. 
    The murmurs of the pale blue corolla, only outdone by the fragrance of the perfume scenting my space bring me back to childhood days where time spent outdoors felt carefree and unburdened. The pretty blooms greeted me as I headed outside to spend the day. Though the blooms only last a short while, the timing is magnificent. A tender beginning into longer days, brilliant sunshine, and joyous memories. Beauty enters at a time when everything else has yet to shine. The hope that all would be right in time.
    Hope. Peace. Joy. Love. These are the words I want to live. I want to remove the words that bring no purpose. Discard any that brings pain and grief. Concentrate on one at a time but knowing that one will lead to two and so on.
    However, before I could get there, I had to heal myself. I must love myself and I’m not sure if I ever had. I always thought that I did but it’s become obvious that if it had once been true, it ceased to be at some point along the way. Maybe it was a little at a time and I just took no notice. It’s possible I never quite knew how to love myself and thinking that it was selfish of me to do that. I’ve always felt guilt where guilt didn’t belong. I couldn’t see how loving yourself manifests into a better life not only for me but also allows healthy and safe relationships for those who enter our lives along the way. I was always great at taking care of my body, but I lacked in the area of my head and my heart. I never felt I had earned it. The hard part was believing I deserved it and holding fast to that commitment. Maybe it needs to be read: Love. Hope. Peace. Joy. Love. The first love is for me and then the healing is followed by the rest.
    It’s in our nature to take pictures of only the good times to reminisce about.  Those moments of our lives that were captured on film, the celebrations, the birth of children, family get-togethers.  Mostly happy, joyous occasions that showed those in attendance with brilliant smiles or immersed in laughter that more often than not included a few tears from the sidesplitting cachinnations.  Brief seconds where expressions of love or contentment were captured to look back and hold onto that feeling.  I found very few solemn times captured that would dampen our moods.  I did find a few though.  A smile was missing or there were tears in my eyes.  If only I could go back and hug that girl and tell her she is loved.  
    The hesitation to love my body completely has always been greater than the acceptance. To truly appreciate what God has given me. I had only seen the imperfections, the scars. Those on the surface and others hidden inside. This body, the one that holds the best parts of me, my mind, heart, and soul is worthy of praise. It’s traveled with me on quite a journey and deserves respect and admiration. The thought has crossed my mind that I’ve never realized the magnitude of all it has done for me.
    The vault that holds my memories, the enchanting moments sprinkled throughout the years. The key to opening all that is my imagination and the sparks that have taken flight from it. The wounds that have been mended, though many carry the secrets better left unsaid. The ability to heal and endure is magical on its own. The miracles of life that were created and brought into this life are joyous accomplishments. The arms that cradled the tiny beings to the breasts that nourished their bodies are elements of love and nurture. They were conceived and survived within this flesh. To be in awe of the wonder of motherhood. The strength to continue each day no matter what obstacles are placed in its path.
    This canvas of flesh has persevered and shown unyielding resolve with each confrontation or denial of self-love. This impermanent model God felt worthy enough to mold is incredible. A symbol of bravery, strength, and beauty deserving of garnering unwavering attention and affection. The time has come to cast the shadows aside and nurture my mind, speak kindly to my heart, and whisper to my soul that I am worth every beautiful opportunity and acknowledgment I am given. I am still here breathing and healing. I was never broken. I just needed to bloom.
     I sit and watch the sunrise on a beautiful day.  It’s spectacular. Seasons change as life does. The cool crisp air awakens my senses and fills my lungs with the scent of renewal.  I find solace in nature’s cyclical rhythm.  The leaves, like memories, rustle, and fall, making way for the promise of spring.  Today’s beauty is eternal, unfettered by the limitations of human life. The sun’s warm touch ignites a sense of gratitude within me.  Each breath is a gift.  Each moment is a treasure.  The seasons have taught me to cherish each moment.  To find beauty in decay and rebirth.  In this fleeting dawn, I feel alive.  The world awakens, vibrant and pulsing.  
     Birds sing their morning hymns, as God’s creatures begin to stir.  I seek simplicity, a sunrise, a breeze, a loved one’s touch.  Life’s complexities fall away, leaving only room for love.  As Autumn’s palette paints the sky, I am reminded:  that every ending marks a new beginning. And in this acceptance, I find peace.  Time, once a linear path, now unfolds like a lotus.  Petals of memory unfurl, releasing the fragrance of the possibility of a better future. Today’s radiance assures me every moment is a masterpiece.

    Jody Seymour

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    • Jody, I love everything about this letter. I love the way you think back to the Renoir painting and how it made you feel as a little girl, fully immersed in the colorful landscape. I also love how you describe finally realizing your worth as an adult. We all struggle with loving ourselves from time to time. I am so glad that you have found peace…read more

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  • Healing Resentment

    Dear Teenage Me,

    Greetings from the future! I would ask, “how’s it going?”, but I already know: life is kind of overwhelming for you right now. Your family recently moved to a new country and here you are, still trying to gain your bearings and fit in at your new school all while your body and mind are experiencing so many changes. There is so much that frustrates you in general and perhaps the most frustrating thing that hits closest to home is your one and only younger sister. I know, I know, you’re probably wondering, “why are we focusing on her in a letter for me?” Please bear with me and hear me out.

    People have been comparing the two of you for as long as you can remember. Maybe it’s because you only have an 18-month age gap between you and how much other people think you look like. Either way, the similarities haven’t changed how differently people treat you. As the older sister, you’re the role model. You’re the responsible one. So when anything goes wrong, it always comes back to your behavior (or lack thereof) in some way. That’s been true since childhood. After all, was it proper for you to go play when your sister had homework and would be distracted by your actions? Was it proper for you to have a dirty room if it meant being a bad example for her? If she was too loud, was it proper for you to leave her to her own devices instead of telling her to take it down a notch (or ten)? The answer, of course, was always no. The expectations for you weren’t always spoken but they were clear: you had to know better and it was your job to look after your sister.

    I know the expectations are even higher now. You understand that your behavior makes a statement about how your parents raised you. You revel in the praise of getting good grades, conforming to the rules, and making your community proud. You understand social cues and adjust your behavior accordingly. Meanwhile, your sister struggles in school and gets into trouble. You see how people stare and laugh at her, not with her. Your parents hear about it from her teachers, and their response is always the same: “talk to your sister”. While you want to help, you also wish you didn’t have to. You wish she could just…figure things out and not attract so much negative attention. You wish she would take responsibility and self-adjust, as you do, instead of making more trouble for herself and for you by extension.

    There is a strong feeling of bitterness that often rises in your chest these days that you don’t have a word for yet. The word is “resentment”, and you feel it in spades. It’s the reason why there is so much anger in your voice whenever you talk to her. It’s the reason why there are hidden and not-so-hidden jabs in the way you speak about her. It’s also the reason why you don’t see how much she is struggling too. How she struggles to figure out whether people want to be their friend or their entertainment. How she also feels the weight of others’ expectations, except unlike you, she knows that she doesn’t meet them. While your resentment highlights her flaws, it allows you to forget her incredible sense of humor or the fact that she is one of the kindest people you know, despite the bullying she experiences. Your resentment makes you so focused on your own confusion and pain that you can’t see her own.

    And when you do figure this out years later and remember the screaming matches, the tears, the mean words, the first thing you’re going to feel is shame. Shame for not being the sister she needed and not being able to take those words back. But wait, there’s hope! I write to you from a time when you and your sister are a strong unit. You laugh and cry together. You apologize better when you upset each other. You now poke gentle fun at your differences and are still fiercely protective of each other. Eventually, you’ll start to forgive yourself for what you didn’t know and what you could have done better. You’ll start learning from her how to be yourself more and contort yourself less. And when your sister encourages you to write, you will roll your eyes good-naturedly and move onto other things without realizing that she has planted one of the many seeds that need to sprout before you’re ready to take that leap.

    Nana Bruce-Amanquah

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    • Nana, relationships between sisters can vary greatly depending on the day. I know with my own sister, sometimes I want to hug and kiss her, and other times I would love to mute her if I could. You had a lot of responsibility for your sister as you were growing up, but it seems to have instilled in you a strength and resilience that is admirable.…read more

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    • I’m sorry you carried so much weight as a child, and other people’s expectations put a wedge between you. But I am so happy you two mended your relationship and now receive the love and support you both so deserve. Thank you for sharing. <3 Lauren

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    • What a beautiful piece. Thank you for sharing… I do not have a sister. But your story painted such a unique picture to me. I hope you realize, you didn’t have all the answers back then… many of us still don’t. But you are doing your best. You are an awesome human! Keep going!

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    • Nana, I could relate to this piece. You and your sister keep soaring.

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  • Justice For You (Ten Years Later )

    What is a body if not a safe space?
    How come within my skin I faced
    Uncomfortableness from friend and foe the same.
    I look back on it now and laugh at the shame.
    Brought upon me by those
    With old school Christian ways.
    “Boys will be boys,” they said when I complained.
    About how they gripped at my chest
    My thighs, My bra straps, My thick mane.
    It all felt so hopeless then.
    It felt like I couldn’t win.
    Against a system, a culture, a people
    That had deemed my body public property.
    When my mother found out she set me straight promptly.
    That I should not encourage trouble upon me
    And to not make myself enticing to draw in unwanted company.
    In the halls of my Southern elite high school
    I rotted away knowing there was nothing I could do.
    That was until me too
    When I saw people cared to not let boys do what they want to do
    To stand up for bodily autonomy no matter the obstacles I had to go through
    Guns, knives and defense classes caused clashes
    with family and boyfriends alike
    But we persevered
    We fought to be not only protected but also feared
    I am proud to say we have incited tears from abusers’ eyes
    As they kiss their families goodbye
    After I used ICE to cool my rage
    And send them packing from a cage
    To their country of origin.
    We did not let our religious start to life
    Hinder us from doing what’s right.
    Silence begets silence
    Passiveness begets passiveness
    In it grows rot that must be dug out and purged.
    We have found our voice and the strength to not let it be silenced.

    Octavia Taylor

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    • Octavia, what you endured as a teenager was absolutely unacceptable. I’m so glad that we are living in a time where girls feel more confident in calling out their abusers and standing up for what is right. Though you suffered injustices that no one should have to, I am so glad that it has given you the strength to encourage others to stand up for…read more

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  • Dear Alex

    Dear (younger) Alex,

    Recently, your parents uprooted your life in Rochester, Minnesota and moved to start a new chapter in Fairfax County Virginia. You just started the 4th grade at Sangster Elementary School and already, your classmates treat Jamestown like it is Disneyland, ride real horses, and have perfect cursive penmanship. Obviously, Virginia has a hard time letting go of the colonial times and takes higher education extremely seriously. But, besides Virginia being oddly proud of it’s past, I know being the new kid in school is hard. Getting teased over your midwestern accent is one thing, but the truth is, I know you don’t want anyone knowing about your secret.

    A few months prior to moving, you found out you have dyslexia. Dyslexia sounds pretty bad considering you don’t even know where to begin on how to spell it. Dyslexia is something where there is no cure and there are no pills that will help. Instead, you just have it.

    Now, if circumstance couldn’t get any worse, you are now stuck in a classroom full of ivy ledge go-getters. Yet here you are, already behind and fearing you will fail out of school for thinking you are not smart enough due to your learning disability. At this point, you assume your best solution is to morph into a shadow, to not talk since you already sound foreign, and constantly dread that everyone is going to find out. Especially when the teacher decides to go on an intense humiliation picking spree and will randomly select some poor soul to read out loud. Of course, there will be some students who will want to show off their college level reading skills but, the teacher loves to pick on someone who hasn’t had a turn. Unfortunately, repeating quietly to yourself, “Don’t pick me” magically manifests into being chosen.

    Now as the future you, I could lie and say no one finds out and you will never get teased. Instead, I am here to be honest with you and deliver the good and bad news.

    First, the bad news:

    The fear of randomly being called to read out loud is forever going to be scary, even to this day. The continuous teasing never ends, people will question your intelligence and ask you why you take so long to finish tests. I can also guarantee that someone in the room will always correct the way you mispronounced a word. There will be many late nights making flash cards, rereading chapters, and triple checking your answers on tests to make sure you read the question correctly. It will be increasing frustrating to hear people say they don’t need to study since it’s so easy. When for us, it’s not so simple.

    Now for the good news:

    I understand the determination to be normal is what truly drives you. But, the older you get, the more you will realize that we are never going to be like everyone else. We simply cannot be and that is because we are not suppose to be. All the hard work you put in trying to be normal actually turns into grit.

    Instead of seeing dyslexia as a burden – dyslexia is a hilarious gift because what isn’t funny about saying, “Can I have some antelope?” When you ment to say cantaloup. Eventually, the fear of being wrong doesn’t worry you anymore because we are so use to not being right. Besides, your entire intelligence isn’t based on a multiple choice test. So instead of hiding, we started embracing learning, asking questions and studying because having unique ideas and being naturally curious is what opens doors for you.

    So although we are not perfect I promise you one thing for sure: you will never fail. Matter a fact, you will just continue to grow and eventually learn how to really fly.

    Alex Rice

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    • Alex, you are truly an inspiration to me! I am an English teacher, and you have solidified my plan to NEVER force students to read aloud. Volunteers only, here. I am so glad that you have learned to embrace your disability and also realize that you are more than dyslexia. Thank you for sharing your story!

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  • Inner ambitions

    Dear Taleena,
    Opportunities will come before you, accept the challenge instead of avoiding a collision. Let ambition flow through your veins with every step. In elementary school, you will have an assignment where you will choose a business venture. Your creative mind will choose to be a banner designer where you will create advertisements for the local classroom businesses. Having a rapport with your fellow classmates will allow you to become the most successful business with recurrence. Your reasonable prices will be relatable as these businesses are just starting up and they need advertisements for their goods and services. Constant smiles and banter will catch the attention of shoppers. Personalize the banners for them to sparkle and shine in the elements of laughter, chaos and townsfolk activities. Maintain this enthusiasm through all of your encounters and don’t let any opportunities pass you by. Build an enterprise and pass through the generations that hard work and dedication will lead you to the destination you deserve and desire.
    Sincerely,
    The one who endured through the chaos and turmoil to create a path for success and independence.

    Taleena Stewart

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    • Taleena, I love how you encourage your younger self to WORK and make things happen. Too often, we rely on fate to lead our lives. Instead, we should try to create our own success. I love that you focus on improvement instead of obstacles. You are an inspiration to me! Thank you for sharing your story.

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