Friday, June 6, 2025

Everything Burned but Me❤️‍🔥

✨A walk ✨


She was ten.

The oldest child.

Too young to carry a world,

but old enough to feel it cracking—

and to know, in some ancient place inside her,

that it was on fire.


The night he died,

they told her it was fast.

That the truck exploded.

That the flames swallowed everything whole

before pain even had the chance to find him.


But in her dreams,

the fire always came back.


It never started with the truck.

It started with her clothes.

Her roller skates.

The soft, glittery pieces of girlhood.

The joy-things. The childhood-things.

All of them rigged with invisible bombs—

ticking quietly,

as if joy had a timer on it too.


And in the dream,

he gathered them up.

Her father.

Not the broken man—

but the one she remembered from before.

He looked at her with eyes that already knew

what she hadn’t yet grown the words to understand.


He said, “Go. Hide. Now.”

And she did.


Naked.

Ashamed.

A ten-year-old Eve,

crawling across the street in silence

into a ditch lined with leaves and trembling light.


She didn’t cry.

She didn’t scream.

She just laid down and covered herself in dirt—

as if the earth were her mother now.

As if she might still hold her,

when no one else would.


Without warning… 

the house exploded.


Not just hers.

Every house on the street.

Every home that ever held a version of her.

Gone. In flames.


But there was no Mom.

No siblings.

No neighbors rushing in with rescue or reason.


Just her.

A small girl in the dirt,

watching everything familiar

fold into fire and vanish.


And sometimes—

he would walk out of the flames.

Her daddy.

Singed and silent,

like a ghost trying to remember

what it felt like to be alive.

To be loved.

To be someone’s hero.


And sometimes—

he didn’t.


But always,

She woke up.


Not screaming.

Just still.

Heart thudding like a war drum

beneath ribs packed with leaves and fear.


Everything burned.

The house.

The laughter.

The soft, sweet normalcy of childhood.


But her?

She didn’t.


She laid quiet in the ditch,

until even the smoke forgot to rise.

Until silence returned like a ghost

kneeling beside her.


She let the dust hang in the air like incense,

offering it to something divine—

whatever might be listening among the ruins.


Because even among the ash,

there are truths—

sharp little ones—

that only come out in the burning.


And when she finally stood…

the girl who rose from that ditch

didn’t carry the fire with her.

She carried the memory.


She let her silence be a hymn.

Because this, too—this ache,

this pause,

this not-knowing—

it’s holy.


The wreckage proved the heart was real.

That she had loved.

That something sacred had lived there.


They say joy comes in the morning.

Or was it mourning?

Maybe it’s both.

Maybe they’re sisters,

braiding their hair with tears and light.


Either way…

She found it.


In the hands of a little boy

whose smile is pure joy 

and his laugh sounds like freedom.

In the almond eyes of a little girl

who sees through time and

exudes a joy that touches the soul.


In God…

in Wisdom.

In love.


And in every breath

I’m still allowed to take.


Year of the Tiger🐅

✨ A short story.✨


One moment, the world was quiet.

But something inside her stirred.

A growl rose up from the belly of her knowing.

A flicker of fire moved behind her ribs.

And a whisper, velvet and ancient, said:

“It’s time.”


So she laid her skin bare

and offered her left arm—

the arm of the womb,

the moon,

the remembering.


And onto her flesh

was carved a tiger,

not leaping,

not snarling,

but climbing downward.


Not a predator—

a guide.

A totem for the descent.

A guardian of the dark.


Because there are places in a woman

no one can go with her.

Not lovers.

Not friends.

Not even the ancestors

until she calls them.


But the tiger…

the tiger never left her side.


She walked with her

into the underworld—

into the ache behind the armor,

into the silence that screamed at night,

into the shame she had inherited like scripture

from women who had been told to shrink.


And when the path narrowed,

when the old stories came clawing back,

when the light dimmed and she thought,

 “I can’t do this,”

the tiger turned her head and said:


“Then I will walk ahead.”


“I will bare my teeth at every lie.”

“I will slash the veils they wrapped you in.”

“I will growl until you remember who the hell you are.”


So she kept walking.


She wept in the dirt.

She remembered the names of her power.

She howled for every time she was told to hush.

She touched the bones of every woman

she’d been forced to bury inside herself.


And when she rose—

she did not wipe the blood off.


She rose crowned in it.

She rose with fire behind her eyes

and a tiger stitched into her skin

as witness.

As protector.

As proof that she went to the bottom of herself—

and lived.


That was the day the girl became

a woman of prophecy—

a healer,

a wild rememberer,

a feminine warrior

with a sacred roar.


Now, when she lifts her left arm

to bless,

to protect,

to heal,

to call someone home—


the tiger rises too.


Because she did not just survive the descent.

She owned it.

She reclaimed it.


And she returned

not empty,

but whole.