You are brilliance

Things I wish my younger self knew, but then again, if we knew, would we try so hard to shine?

It’s the paradox of life, isn’t it?

I watch my teenaged granddaughters struggle, and I want to lift them up, but I know that words aren’t enough. Letting them know I believe in them is what matters.

It will have to be enough.

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Permission to write, paint, and imagine are the gifts I gave myself when chronic illness hit - a fair exchange: being for doing. Relevance is an attitude. Humour essential.

18 thoughts on “You are brilliance

  1. So true! I talk to my granddaughter that way too, about how brilliant she is even though she doesn’t realize it yet. And how brilliant each stage of her life is, this child (or tween) she is now, and to live it fully. She does and does not believe me. But the thought is planted and its hers to water if she desires. Regardless, she’d still brilliant!

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  2. Teenage years are the hardest, and sometimes their ears are shut to our words. They unconsciously know and in time, they will hold onto the fact that you believed in them, and they will come to believe in their own light.

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  3. Just like a butterfly that must struggle to emerge from the cocoon, we cannot take on the struggles of our loved ones. It is hard, but you are right, it is best to believe in them and let them find their own personal way. Good reminder for us all, VJ.

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  4. Like a butterfly coming out of a cocoon, it has to struggle to be strong enough. It is hard, though, watching loved ones struggle. You are so right, though. What they need most is for you to believe in them, that they will find their own way. Great reminder to us all.

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