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James (Jim) Kellogg shared a letter in the
Magical Moments group 8 months, 3 weeks ago
running in slow motion
running in slow motion
By: Jim Kellogg
(The Queer Poet)
9-30-24running in slow motion
at an exceptionally reduced pace
toward
away from
not content in the middle
looking back
with mixed emotions
hostility
satisfaction
looking forward
with mystery
a riddle
a question mark
creating a kaleidoscope
black and white
dazzling hues
unsteady
stable
mirrors and shards of broken glass
reflecting
challenging
creating madness
birthing sagenessrunning in slow motion
at an exceptionally reduced pace
closed doors
barriers and secrets
open doors
exploration and opportunitiesSubscribe  or  log in to reply
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James, uncertainty is a big part of life! That is the beauty of it! Nobody knows exactly what they’re doing, or has everything figured out. Life moves on and we just have to keep moving on with it. Everything will fall into place, don’t stress. We are here with you ♥
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Thank you so very much.
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S.K shared a letter in the
Magical Moments group 8 months, 3 weeks ago
Safety net
I FEEL IT, I LOVE IT
IT’s THAT FEELING CALLED HOME.Kicking off my shoes, as I undo my hair
Hanging up the keys, as I climb up the stairs
I feel the same reassurance flooding my inside
As I peel off my pretenses, my ego, my pride.
Standing there exposed, leaving it all on the outside
There was no longer a need to cover
To fake , to pretend or hide.For I was finally home!
Kindling up the fires , I brew a comforting cup of tea
With no inhibitions or rules, my soul feels happy, peaceful and free.
This was my shelter , my no judgement zone
Unburdening the weight of opinions
I feel light as just me and me alone.For I was finally home!
Nudging me to step out,
To discover, conquer and explore,
But enticing me to return,
Today and everyday even more.
Quelling my fears while keeping me calm,
This is one place where I know no one can do me harm.As I shut the doors each day , I ask myself
Do I ever truly leave?
For though around me , the world and it’s people I see
In my pocket, I secretly carry that piece of home with me!Subscribe  or  log in to reply
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Omg, I love love love this piece! I will be including it in our newsletter today as our featured story. It’s true what they say, there is no place like home. It’s so powerful and important to have a place of peace to return to each day. Thank you for sharing and thank you for being part of our Unsealed family <3 Lauren
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This means so much Lauren!!! Thanks for your kind words❤️❤️
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SK, this is amazing!! I am so glad that you have such a comfortable place to feel like yourself. I love this line: “This was my shelter, my no judgment zone.” I hope that everyone gets to feel like this and have a place this important to them at some point in their lives.
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Thanks harper! Yes having a “home”is not to be taken for granted.
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kellybeanz87 shared a letter in the
Magical Moments group 9 months ago
The Footsteps of my Heart
See these footsteps? These are the imprints of the precious little feet I created with my DNA. My little son walking, frolicking, and playing in the sand. Living life and enjoying it in the moment. I can now hold on to this picture, the memories attached to it- and now even this letter … forever and ever 🌹❤️
May the strength of my men always carry me through the longest of walks in life.
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This is absolutely beautiful. I love the picture and the sentiment. <3 Lauren
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Thank you so much my sons are my world 🌎 🩵
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Kelly, this is so cute. Your son is so lucky to have a person like you in his life ♥
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Thank you so much, I hope they feel that way xoxoxo
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Oswald Perez shared a letter in the
Magical Moments group 9 months, 1 weeks ago
A Poetic Journey, Reborn
Dear Unsealsers,
As the second half of September is about to begin, it comes with a special announcement.
The paperback edition of my poetry book, “A Poetic Journey, Staying At Home” went live on Amazon earlier this week. It is being published by The Key Publishing House.
This isn’t the first life this book has had, though. I self-published it back in October 2020 as an e-book. It became my finishing project after completing the author and business coach Cathy Heller’s twelve-week program, Made To Do This. But as I stared at the poster that Canva made for me with the book’s cover art, I wasn’t satisfied. I wanted to have the feel of actually having the book in my hands.
As the proof copy of the book arrived on Wednesday, all I felt was joy. I couldn’t show it off to everyone and revel in the accomplishment.
These twenty-one poems were written in the spring of 2020. At the time, I was furloughed from my previous job at the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. I had more time than I knew what to do with as I wouldn’t be back to work until July of that year.
On the advice of one of my Made To Do This colleagues, I gathered the poems for a crude manuscript to send to Bull City Press for their Inch magazine. I didn’t make it in, but I was inspired to see this book into the world.
Twenty-one poems. Running the gamut from coming to terms with my Cerebral Palsy (CP) to reliving Ecuador’s first gold medal in the Olympics (Oro) to an ode to a place that I loved to visit (Nissa La Bella).
This isn’t the only stop on the Poetic Journey. There is a follow-up in the works, A Poetic Summer. Within the next year or so, I hope to complete the master plan of four poetry books, based on the four seasons.
I know this letter was a shameless promotion, but I wanted to reach out to all my communities.
I feel a major sense of accomplishment that this has come to bear.
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C. Gee Short shared a letter in the
Magical Moments group 10 months ago
This post is viewable by the Unsealed community only.
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Patrick Stapleton shared a letter in the
Magical Moments group 10 months, 2 weeks ago
Paying It Forward: A Night of Kindness
Was driving home from work after not having the greatest night… and I saw a guy, with his hazards on, pushing his van…
I came back around and asked him if he needed some help (along with another person who had stopped) and he said that he had run out of gas. I told him that I needed some, too, and to hop in my car.
We pull up to the gas station and there’s a container sitting right next to the pump. Could not have scripted it better…
While I was filling the container, we were talking and he told me how thankful he was… I said that it was no problem and that he had to pay it forward. He then told me that a few days earlier, he had helped a man who was suicidal. I said that’s amazing and that this is just coming back to him for doing the right thing!
My point in telling this story is that the world is not as bleak as it is made out to be… times are obviously very tough right now, but there is still something to be said for helping each other out. I told the guy as he was leaving that good deeds go in a cycle, from one person to the next… we hugged and went on our separate ways, both better for having met each other.
“Service to others is the rent you pay for your room here on Earth.”
— Muhammad Ali
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Wow, I love this! Kindness really does repay itself! What you give is what you receive and this is applicable in so many ways!! You will feel better about yourself having done a kind deed and you will be so appreciative when someone helps you out with their kindness! Great message! Thank you for always being kind ❤️
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Vicki Lawana Trusselli shared a letter in the
Magical Moments group 1 years ago
'THE SEAGULLS OF LIGHT"
Dear Unsealed
I wake up each day
In the everyday way
I read my email as I do
Each day in the everyday way.
Old photos found of yesteryear,
Brought back a tear
To my eyes as I thought I lost
At such a cost
Of a long-ago broken relationship
Like a ship
On the ocean of life
I ask myself why.
Then as I scroll through the lost photos
That I now found,
Of long ago.
I remember the seagulls of at the beach
Where I lived temporarily as though
I could now reach
Out to touch the seagulls
Hear their cries of joy
At 5am as they call for me to feed their bods
Of beautiful feathers of grey & white joy,
Of walking out in my sundress to the backyard
Behind my adobe
As they cry with joy so loud.
I had another fight with my ex,
Of the complex
Relationship with Jekyll & Hyde dude.
As I sat in the chair watching the birds eat
Their treat
From kitchen so neat
I forgot about the harsh words spoken
The night before the morning light
Of the seagulls feeding frenzy flight,
My buddies, the seagulls.
My friends in flight
Take me with you tonight.
We will sit on the beach
As the sun fades into the night,
As the sunrises the next day to say,
“Girl, you ‘gonna’ be okay.”
Hear the call of the seagull in flight
To carry your sadness into to the night,
To smile,
To laugh,
To care,
To carry on,
Despite harsh words
& other verbs
Of yesterday.
The sun shines brighter today
Along the way.
I can still hear my feathered friends.
Knowing that if I stepped into the photograph for just a minute
I could smell the salty air
As my feathered friends
Say, “Girl we care.”Subscribe  or  log in to reply
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Kevin Lowe shared a letter in the
Magical Moments group 1 years, 1 months ago
This post is viewable by the Unsealed community only.
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jeremiah2 submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
Despite My Diagnosis I Am In Control of My Destiny
Greetings,
Invasive Ductal Carcinoma of the left breast was my diagnosis in August 2022. The day would forever alter the course of my life. I am writing to you today as a testament to strength, courage, and resilience. Not just for myself, but all those affected by this disease. I write to continue to encourage myself in this literal fight for my life.
I began to write not long after my radiation treatments ended. I had a few poems written and a short story from a few years ago. A relative visiting from out of town happened to mention that She was an editor. At that time, she had a small side business as a proofreader and editor. I couldn’t believe it. I’ve known her all my life and never knew. So I took a chance, a leap of faith some would say. I mentioned, ever so meekly, that “I have written a book.”
She was ecstatic! She had a couple of authors as clients and believed in the power of writing. This made me anxious and excited all at the same time. The next day she shared with me her thoughts and encouraged me to continue writing.
Since that conversation, I started blogging and posting positivity, which helped with the dread I felt inside at times. Writing my thoughts was a much-needed form of therapy. With my diagnosis, treatments, and all that I experienced in 2022 and 2023, I definitely needed a positive outlet. Life had become chaotic and some of my poor decisions made things even harder.
Now that I’ve gone through the storm clouds and darkness, I’m even more grateful for my life. I’m thankful for everyday I’m blessed to see. Living with purpose and the hope of the future and whatever life has in store . My desire now is to spread a message of self-love, peace and light. To take back that which we often lose when dealing with a sickness such as cancer, our autonomy.
Yours Truly,
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Congratulations on getting to the flowers! I am also a cancer survivor (thyroid), so I really relate to this story of using creative mediums to push through. Your work has a very regal feel to it, and I’m so glad you shared!
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Thank you so much for sharing with me. I continue to be encouraged and reading your message has made my day.!
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jlodle11 submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
The Power of a Learning Soul
Hurt and broken
I could not see.
No more taking
only giving.
I’m now the king
loved and adored.
Patient, obscured.
Like a driftwood
Now found ashore.
I’ve left behind
bad parts of me.
Rising above
so found and free.
At a stalemate
I fought myself
at rock bottom.
Now, at the top
we always say,
“Don’t you worry,
yeah we got ’em”.
Experience
built, never bought.
lessons they’ve taught.
From good to bad
and bad to good.
On second thought
although I should,
a favorite
experience
I have not got.
Learn from them all,
That’s what I’s taught.Voting is closed
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The flow is so excellent! I love the lines “I’m now the king
loved and adored.
Patient, obscured.
Like a driftwood
Now found ashore.”
It was so simple, yet I can imagine the imagery so clearly in my head. I love the way the words sway like a dance on the screen. Thank you for sharing 🙂Write me back Subscribe  or  log in to reply
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This poem is has me reading and rereading it! I love how well you captured the chaos and ups and downs of life and your own life with the flow of the words and lines. Again, really stellar job!
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Thank you for the inspiration you’ve sparked with your compliment within a comment 🫡
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Thank YOU for your compliment contained in a comment 🙂
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era submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
Journey to my soul
There were times in my life,
When I really felt like my existence was unimportant, like I was just back ground music while being stuck inside of my own head as I went about my day, in a world where everything was so overwhelming, I screamed inside of the TV, they saw me but laughed & hit the mute button. It was as though nothing was real or even existed, much less mattered.My life was one giant TV & I was looking straight at my life like a spiraling, emotional roller coaster some might also have watched as a late night soap opera but none of it was real, much less valid.
I was just there unattached as I stand there watching my life & family pass me by at a young age.
I suppose I overlooked a lot of things I don’t even remember.My dad would curse God & break things.
My mother was indeed a narcissist so these reactions would fire her up & I was the one who took care of her during her darkest hours of addiction.I was there but was framed a lot from my father. I was called words like “freak” or “retarded” I learned at a young age not to cry out as victim everytime these darkest hours would return to me again.
I was told to silence my feelings unless I had something worth saying so I quit speaking & shut myself down.There is a lifetime of Hell beneath the surface, so much blood & lava I spilled along the way after I left that place.
I look back at my ashes that I bled now & I saw a mirror & myself & everything that was ever behind me looking right back at me.
I had no choice but to turn around, to travel & face it all over again.
The same trail of blood I just wanted to leave behind, I had no choice but to go back to that place of anguish just to find myself all over again.I cross paths again of times when I experienced fires so wild,
The smoke was so strong & I had no choice but to leave that past version of myself behind.As the smoke began to clear I see this little girl crying on the porch steps of a home that is burning, it’s literally on fire but she’s still sitting on the steps, I have so many questions but wonder why she is just sitting there on the porch steps of a home that is falling down into flames behind her.
I watched as the ashes pepper down, surrounding us both I took hold of that little girl & I held onto her as though it was all a strong storm.
I finally held her face in my hands & I saw her tears run down from her blue eyes as we locked eyes.
She could speak again because she finally felt safe within her world of chaos.
She told me that I needed to go back into that burning house & find her mother who is very sick & that it’s up to me to save her.
I go inside to find that her dad is gone & this woman is sitting on the sofa watching the latest soap opera of my life, crosses built with fire & agony covers the walls & I ask her if she is afraid of dying as she lights up another cigarette.
She stares at the TV with judgment in her eyes & she tells me that I can do better.
Everything blows up into flames & it sends me back into a completely different timeline & I was not aware that I even exist in, this is my life now?
I didn’t believe in God up until now… I finally feel alive.
I have created my own path to meet eye to eye with God & what that all even means.
Growing up, I was always a sinner, I was born within a world of sin so without salvation through Jesus Christ I would only burn in hell.
It brought me so many questions & pain as a little kid I would look at the cross on my bedroom wall & pray to God at night that I was good enough & would someday make it into heaven.
Some days I just wanted to die so I could go to heaven & be in a better place.
I detached myself from organised religion all together after going through many dark phases beginning at a young age, younger versions of myself rebuked the thought of God or what it even means to be moving all of these piles of destroyed items aside from what I was raised to believe & finding my own path through spirituality. 🖤🔥
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It’s so wonderful to hear that you’re in a better place now. God is intertwined with everything so it shows a lot of courage to find your own path and do what makes sense for your life. I really like the way you told this story! It feels very conversational and personal 🙂
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laurhirs526 submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
Greatest Hits Vol. 1
A college graduation ceremony,
The celebration of
Hours and hours spent studying,
Working student janitor jobs,
Barely sleeping or maintaining a social life,
Driven by passion and encouraged by professors and peers.
This a defining moment I haven’t experienced,
My college journey cut short by
A doctor’s visit,
A new orange prescription bottle that felt like a cinderblock in my backpack.
A series of events that I was sure would make everyone see me as
A failure, lazy, without determination.I moved back into my parents home,
Like a puppy without a treat,
My tail tucked between my legs.
I struggled to find my purpose,
My place in a town I thought I’d left behind.As fate, or the internet, would have it,
I met someone.
They saw parts of me that I was ashamed of,
And told me how bright they shined.
They laid bare past relationships full of betrayal and heartbreak,
And I held them when they finally gave themselves the space to cry for how they were hurt.
We slow danced in the kitchen,
To old school jazz,
While sweet potatoes cooked in the oven..
And I saw days stretching ahead
With this beautiful being
This other half of my soul.Wedding bells pealed,
Vows were written and tearfully exchanged.
Families drew together to celebrate,
Dancing ruled the night!
But not for me.
I sat at another wedding reception, thinking of the text message
Telling me things weren’t going to work out.
Another moment I once thought would be so defining,
Slipping away from my grasp.The more I grow,
The more I discover myself,
The more I lean into even the darkest parts of my mind and heart,
The more I think that my “most defining days” may be made up of simple, quiet moments.
Of the times I have held myself on the bathroom floor,
And through all the loss remind myself
I am worthy of love
And great things are still ahead for me.Voting is closed
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I love your usage of literary devices! For example, “A new orange prescription bottle that felt like a cinderblock in my backpack” painted a clear picture of how you felt at that moment. I can relate to the heavy feeling of new meds. You used a lot of description to help the reader see and feel your story!
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Thank you so much! I really struggle sometimes to feel like I am getting my point across or painting a clear picture. 💞 thank you for your reassurance!
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jaya0810 submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
Staying longer at the nursing home
To my supervisor:
I wonder how much we remember about each other before formally meeting. Predicting what happens next is less difficult. Working with you at the underfunded rural nursing home every Sunday made sure of that. I can count the times on one hand when I walked onto the floors overflowing with wheelchairs and the malodor of overcooked eggs, and it was not a staff member’s first day. I loved meeting new people, so I never minded.
You knew my hours as an activity assistant were long, but also that I couldn’t just leave when my shifts properly ended. At first, the motivation was to finish up tasks, like charting attendance, wiping up spilled juice, or finding missing puzzle pieces. As time went on, I found myself staying on my own accord. When commuting home, I would give myself a headache thinking of all things I wished I would have done or said. I never knew if or when I would see the residents again. Many were old and received treatments in the adjacent hospital. When one left, it tended to be for good.
Staying late let me provide companionship to the residents, who welcomed me into their family. In the literal sense, they all were family. The nursing home was in a town with more general stores than stoplights. You would know better than anyone. You were once babysat by that husband-wife couple who always threatened to break off their marriage through the paper-thin walls separating their rooms. Other residents worked at the hotel together. Still, some were retired professors, who no doubt passed down notes to my instructors who taught me at the college nearby.
Knowing about the interconnectivity among residents made me want to stay even longer. An aspiring healthcare provider then, it was devastating to witness residents interact with each other one week and then ignore each other the next. Dementia stole their abilities to recognize and remember. There was only so much “Good Old Days” magazine reading I could do to help them know who I was until my efforts became futile too. But it felt impossible to just stop caring. Sunday could never come fast enough. My weeks were preoccupied not with my chemistry homework but with thinking about what our favorite fiery, retired pharmacist would want for her manicure or if the sunroom was spacious enough for all residents to enjoy a magic show.
On occasion, the break room was my retreat. Located off the busiest wing, it provided little reprieve from resident squabbling, therapy dogs barking, and nursing demands. What is did give me was a place to collect myself after noticing a cart with a basket of bananas, water, and a note scrawled with “Processing the death of a loved one” parked in front of an octogenarian’s room. As my shifts went on, I noticed you and other staff members slipping in silently to do the same. The sadness and stressors of it all made us quickly turn from strangers to friends.
You and I grew to share a special bond. Each morning, I would find you shuffling through shelves and writing down learning objectives. Planning and executing the perfect activity were paramount, even if we were the only ones who noticed. I soon understood the sense of purpose and satisfaction your job gave you after you tearfully explained the hard times that you experienced in your financially unstable, misguided younger days. “I just want to own a house for me and my kids,” you said. I would agree as my eyes swelled with tears.
I grew up in a privileged family. My parents’ house large is enough for me and my five siblings to each have our own bedrooms twice over. I attended that well-funded college miles down the road. Working at the nursing home showed me how malleable my life was. When working, I was someone who cared about people who barely knew me and worked alongside people like you whose life experiences were so far removed from mine. But, nowhere else would I have been able to gain the depth of perspectives on the things that really mattered.
I cannot remember my last day working. I always thought I would be back after my spring break, but the COVID-19 pandemic had other plans. However, I do remember the day of my interview, when I toured the community space to the chorus of fifty feet thumping out “When the ants go marching home.” You, even before you became my supervisor, looked up as I entered and grinned widely, never missing a beat.
Now, I stay awake at night thinking of all the stories that not meeting you and everyone at nursing home earlier would ensure would never be told.
In hopes we meet again soon,
JayaVoting is closed
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You did a wonderful job with bringing me into your world. I can vaguely imagine what it would be like to work in a nursing home, but after reading this, I feel like I’m right there next to you, surrounded by so many people with so many stories. It’s really wonderful to hear how much perspective and depth this experience has given you! It’s great t…read more
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This story/piece is amazing and really shows your kind heart. Thank you for sharing and thank you for being part of The Unsealed family. <3 lauren
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snikliw88 submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
Get Up
To whom it may concern,
I was on day three of my binge. By binge, I mean combining: weed, Jack Daniel’s, chocolate bars infused with mushrooms, and sleeping pills. It was an odd combination, but it did the trick. After nine years of drugs and alcohol everyday, my tolerance was higher than I could ever be. In those days I chased that high, that happiness. Everyday I added new ways to make me feel better. If someone approached me with a harder drug, like meth or coke, I’m positive I would’ve done it without question.
I was just fired from a job I loved, being a high functioning addict and alcoholic wasn’t something they signed up for. I was morning a loss when I got fired, which helped fuel the three day binge.
I was living with roommates. I slept in the garage when it was nice. During the binge I stayed in the house because it was winter. I liked the garage at the time, it was my own space. I wasn’t judged for how much I smoked or drank. I got in my roommates way a lot. My problems got in the way a lot.
Day three was New Years Eve. I started early that day, and by night I was drunk and high. Then I ate more of those shroom bars until I was disconnected from reality. But for the first time in nine years, instead of a wave of relief, euphoria, and happiness – I was engulfed with fear, dread, and paranoia. Everything felt wrong. It felt like something bad was about to happen. I was terrified. I thought I was going to die. I ran to the living room panicking, shaking, and screaming, “something is wrong! something is wrong!” But no one was there. My roommates weren’t home. I was alone.
Next thing I knew I was on the ground shaking and convulsing uncontrollably. I felt fear and death weighing me down. I kept my eyes wide open because I was scared of the darkness when I closed them. I didn’t wanna get lost in the dark.
I heard a thousand voices in my head, scary and screaming like demons. I wanted it to stop, begged in my head for them to stop. Only in my head because I couldn’t talk aloud. I couldn’t utter a word. I stayed on the floor internally begging for it all to stop. It kept going. I saw dark shadow figures dancing around me. It made me feel even more sick and scared.
They eventually disappeared and I was still on the floor. I didn’t know what was real and what was a hallucination. The voices were still swirling around me. I felt stuck in this nightmare for eternity, I thought it was never going to end. Then, like a crack of sunlight on a dark and cloudy day, a familiar voice screamed, “STOP. GET UP!” The convulsions stopped.
The command drowned out the demon voices. It shouted again, “GET UP!” I obeyed. I got to my feet and felt for the wall. The room was spinning while I felt my way to the kitchen. I remember drinking some water. I remember throwing up in the sink.
I don’t remember how I got to the couch.
The next thing I do remember was waking up, feeling a wave of relief that I was alive and the dread was gone. The feeling of death holding me down was gone. I felt sick to my stomach but relieved.
In that moment, I thought about everything going on in my life. My personal losses, my friends, the job I lost (didn’t seem too important anymore), my family, the things I’ve done but didn’t want to talk about, I thought about everything. I ultimately decided I never want to feel that kind of fear again. The drugs and alcohol are going to kill me. I decided I didn’t want to die. I decided I didn’t want to live like that anymore.
The days that followed were rough, paranoia laid on me like a weighted blanket. I still felt a demon on me. I moved out of the house and had a mental breakdown because of other traumas and withdraws. I felt low, but I eventually got better.
I think back on the voice that told me to get up. I’m not sure if it was God, a guardian angel, or a version of me I lost years ago; because, the voice sounded like a better version of me. Instead of chasing a high, I started chasing that voice. I wanted to be that person. I wanted to be strong.
A year sober now, I can say I am a lot stronger. Fear can be a motivator. It was the kickstart I needed, but the strength I heard in that voice is what kept me going. The voice that told me to get up.
This is my life, the only person in this world that can really help me is myself.
Listen to that little voice inside your head that warns you, before it’s too late and it’s no longer a whisper but a scream telling you to get up.
It warns, guides, and protects you for a reason. That voice loves you.
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I really love the way you wrapped this story up. Saying, “I’m not sure if it was God, a guardian angel, or a version of me I lost years ago,” adds a lot of light to your journey. Chasing your own voice and getting closer to yourself is a really beautiful gift to get from so many years of darkness. Congratulations and thank you for sharing 🙂
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Thank you so much! Really means a lot to me!!! 💕
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I love this line, “. Instead of chasing a high, I started chasing that voice.” This is so good. I am sorry for all you went through, but I am so inspired by where you are now! Thank you for sharing!
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Thank you so much for your kind words!!! 💕
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My name is Danyelle I’m a fellow Unsealer. First I would like to say like to say thank you for sharing your story. And for also being transparent, we all need that today. I have a YouTube channel and my community all about taking back our power/autonomy. I have featured your story as part of a resilience series, as well as a few others from the…read more
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Wow! thank you for featuring me in your YouTube channel! What’s the link to the video? I would love to see it!
Thank you again for your kind words!! ❤️
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otherlover submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
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wintersummers1322 submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
For Better (or for worse)
Nothing quite like it huh..
The darkest before the..?The City suffocation
met with a hand
asking to dance..In the yellow jeep—
On the lake house dock—
At the formals and those ‘parties’
In the backyard with the bonfires—
On the top of our lungs.
At the NYC extravaganzas and all those weekend showsThe City of suffocation
met with a hand
asking to dance..In the Uber—
On the Amtrak—
At the 100s of airports and all those adventures
In the sunshine of JAX—
On the island of Aruba—
At every
‘hey how’ve ya been?!’
but the moreso
‘see ya soon!’The City suffocation
met with a hand
asking to dance..In the kitchen—
On the sidewalks of Back Bay—
At the apartment—
that we
once called
Ours.The City suffocation
met with a hand
that let—
…
…
…go.In the bedroom.
On the 6th.
At the end—
of my—
world.Paralyzed.
Numb.
The City suffocation..A pride check—
A truck ride—
A bridge.
The all ‘too familiars’
welcomed home with a
darkness.Yet a renewal
out of something..
Broken—
A ‘failure-of-being’
met with a
comeback story.The ocean—
Mom’s check-in hugs—
Your ‘small town’ self—
Family Sunday dinners—
Where it all began.Give it a chance..
what’s really left to lose?Familiar saviors
with the warmth of
our younger selves and
all our innocent soccer days—
met with strangers and a sense of
out of place-gratefulness.A phoenix in a sense
and of the sorts
of it.
5+ years later.
Look at this fire—
remember this fire
of simple—
yet pure—
and the most genuine—
magic.The darkest.
Darkness.
Light it all on fire.
Jetty jumps.
Ocean dives.
The unplanned comeback story.The City suffocation
met with a hand..
this time—of her own—
telling her to
…
…
…dance.—xoxo
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I would LOOOVE to hear this as a song. I can feel myself dancing to it as I read through it. I like that you repeated “The city suffocation” multiple times; it emphasizes your story well 🙂 Thank you!
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This is so beautiful. I was also a soccer player! I love how I could picture everything you were writing. <3 Lauren
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You are a very talented writer. I feel l can envision all these stolen moments you are writing about and how they always come back to the city of suffocation. This is some work that you should be super proud of!
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dommamomma submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
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jasmurphy submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
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zimeon submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
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ludlumpenned submitted a contest entry to
Write a poem or letter to the world about an experience that changed you or your life for the better 1 years, 2 months ago
When those two lines changed my life
Not all changes in your life will seem like a good thing until you gain some clarity. Some life changes will alter you in unexpected ways where you feel that you will never recover and that its life shattering revelations seem to define you in unexpected ways. You can’t see the future into the unknowns where you confidently know the events unraveling would actually change your life for the better. At the time you feel like you will never recover. Your so deep into trying to process the unfolding series of revelations you can’t see how these moments and challenges are setting you up for success! The challenges with accepting or embracing the changing moments coming at you can seem life shattering! They simply don’t seem as a necessary purging of old habits or crutches you counted on in order to make you feel comfortable in your circumstances. You should grieve the loss of what could have been. You should I process and embrace the waves or tsunamis of feelings that catch you fully by surprise!
For me, the day I found out I was pregnant with my daughter at the age of 21 was one of those moments where life changed me for the better! I had this preconceived theory that I would I never be a mom. In fact, I had already aligned myself into believing that being a mom, for me would be toxic for any child. I didn’t have a healthy role model in my own mother that made me want to be a mom. Some events that happen to us are seared into our brains where after many years, you still remember exactly where you were, what you were wearing, and weird details that you just cannot shake off! February 2nd, 2002, I was having a heated argument with a family member who was eating in front of me and I felt a wave of nausea that hit me in a way I had never experienced before. I was also late. I was in denial that the first test was accurate and after buying so many pregnancy tests to confirm that I was indeed pregnant, I still didn’t tell anyone. Those two lines on each test confines my worst fear, I was pregnant! I had been on the pill and we actively used condoms.
When I really started to tell people what was happening they all seemed to know I had been carrying a baby and yet said nothing. Later, I would discover that they knew because I was puking all of the time and looked different. I felt different but did not realize anyone else could see that about me. At the time, I thought I had truly kept my secret hidden. Now, that seems laughable to me. It’s funny how time and distance changes your perspectives. At the time I simply couldn’t see past my uncertainties and insecurities of becoming a mom.
Rather than continue to be the kind of mom who made the world revolve around me, I decide to go on a different path. Instead of wallowing in my insecurities at the impending lifelong responsibilites, I focused on breaking generational curses within my family’s construct to being the best mom a little girl never asked for. I felt this increasing anxiety that my daughter would hate me and would discover I was a mother fraud. That she would instantly know I was never meant to be a mom. Fortunately, that didn’t happen. Instead, we grew up together. I learned how to be a mom and she was the best teacher I have ever had the honor of learning from. The day my beautiful daughter was born I instantly fell in love with this tiny human who I haven’t been able to stop staring at for the last 21 years of my life. I remember staring at her nonstop for the first few weeks. That was when being in awe of her began. Her being 21 has been a full circle moment where I see that I was absolutely over time was meant to be her mom. I still stare at this beautiful young woman who is still teaching me how to be a better mom all the time! She is the best of me. She is the best of herself. Though my marriage to her father ended that only made our bond as mother and daughter even stronger. She is most marvelous thing I have ever had the honor to create with the exception of her brother Who is also amazing! I am honored that she chose me to nurture her from a baby to an adult. I am so honored that I was chosen to be her mom!
We have the opportunity to face challenges and events that change us into something that can majorly transform our lives for the better if only at times we get out of our own way. Although becoming pregnant when I was just a baby adult that time in my life seemed overwhelmingly daunting at the time! Time, distance, and perspective have led me to embrace that I wouldn’t change the events that brought me to being a part of her life! Having my daughter is the best time thing with the exception of her baby brother that completely changed my life for the better! I am an absolutely better person for becoming a mom to these two loves of my life!
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You did a great job of clearly communicating your story and walking me through your journey. It seems simple, but it takes a great writer to be able to tell a clear story without getting lost on tangents! (I lose my point constantly) I love how you took a super overwhelming time and life and found an even greater amount of beauty in it, congratulations 🙂
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sorry, typo; time in life*
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Thank you for your kind words. Writing has been one of passions for many years and it feels like a “full circle” if you will as of late. I am finally coming into my own and my confidence with writing has become aligned as well. I appreciate your reading and especially for your kind observations.
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Your kids are so lucky to have you as their mom. This is beautiful. <3 Lauren
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Thank you so much, Lauren! That means so much to me and this beautiful community you have created!
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