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  • A POEM A DAY 258
  • A POEM A DAY 257
  • A POEM A DAY 256
  • A POEM A DAY 255
  • A POEM A DAY 254
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  • A POEM A DAY 258

    A POEM A DAY 258

    July 10, 2026
    My Joy
    My joy begins where the first light slips through the longleaf pines of North Florida, painting the forest floor in ribbons of gold. Before the roads awaken and the world remembers its hurry, I find peace in the hush of creation—in the rustle of palmettos, the chorus of songbirds, and the gentle breeze that carries the scent of pine, cedar, and rain.

    I find my joy along the winding banks of the Suwannee River, where dark waters move with quiet purpose beneath towering cypress trees. Their weathered trunks stand like faithful guardians, while Spanish moss sways from ancient live oaks, dancing to a rhythm only the wind understands. The river does not rush, and in its steady flow, it reminds me that there is beauty in moving through life with grace instead of haste.

    My heart feels at home on sandy trails where deer leave fresh tracks in the morning and wildflowers bloom without seeking admiration. The rolling hills of North Florida rise gently beneath wide-open skies, offering peaceful overlooks where hawks circle overhead and clouds drift like unhurried prayers. Here, every path feels like an invitation to slow my steps and open my heart.

    The crystal-clear springs are among my greatest joys. Their cool waters, bubbling from deep within the earth, shimmer with impossible shades of blue and green. Beneath their glass-like surface, fish glide effortlessly while turtles drift through waving grasses. Standing beside these springs, I am reminded that the purest things often flow from hidden places, quietly nourishing everything around them.

    As evening settles over the countryside, another kind of beauty awakens. Tree frogs begin their chorus from the wetlands, crickets weave their endless song through the fields, and fireflies scatter tiny lanterns across the dusk. The setting sun washes the sky in soft shades of amber, rose, and lavender before giving way to a blanket of stars that shine brighter than any city lights ever could.

    Even the summer thunderstorms bring joy. Dark clouds gather over the pines, thunder rolls across the fields, and warm rain soaks the earth with life. When the storm passes, the air feels washed clean, carrying the rich fragrance of wet soil and fresh leaves. The world seems to breathe again, and so do I.

    Nature here asks for nothing except my presence. It teaches me through every season, every river bend, and every quiet sunrise. The steadfast pines speak of resilience. The flowing river whispers of faith. The ancient oaks remind me that strength is found in deep roots, while every wildflower blooming along a country road proclaims that beauty does not need permission to flourish.

    This is my joy—not found in crowded places or hurried moments, but in the sacred stillness of North Florida. It lives in the call of an osprey soaring above the Suwannee, in the cool embrace of a spring-fed stream, in the shade of centuries-old live oaks, and in the gentle peace that settles over the land as daylight fades.

    Here, surrounded by God's creation, I remember who I am. The forests quiet my restless thoughts. The rivers carry away what I no longer need. The open sky lifts my eyes with hope. In this place of pine forests, clear springs, winding rivers, and endless horizons, my soul discovers that joy has never been far away. It has always been waiting for me in the heart of North Florida.

    Simona A. Brinson

    Photo by Deborah Downes on Unsplash

    ©mylifeinword.com All rights reserved.

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  • A POEM A DAY 257

    A POEM A DAY 257

    July 9, 2026
    A Flower of Radiant Beauty
    She rises where the quiet light is born,
    not asking permission from the morning sky,
    but opening anyway—
    petal by petal,
    as if the world itself
    had called her name.
    The wind moves around her gently,
    as though it remembers
    something sacred it once forgot.
    Even time slows here,
    hesitating at the edge of color
    too vivid to pass without notice.
    She does not try to shine.
    She simply becomes what she is—
    a soft declaration
    that beauty does not need applause
    to be real.
    Bees arrive like small prayers
    drawn to what they cannot explain,
    and the earth beneath her roots
    holds steady,
    as if proud to be the ground
    that supports such becoming.
    And when evening leans in close,
    she does not disappear—
    she gathers the last light,
    holds it briefly within herself,
    and teaches the dark
    how to remember brightness.

    Simona A. Brinson

    Photo by Kazuhiro Yoshimura on Unsplash

    ©mylifeinword.com All rights reserved.

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  • A POEM A DAY 256

    A POEM A DAY 256

    July 8, 2026
    Mending
    A heart can break from death,
    from the empty chair at the table,
    from a voice you still expect to hear
    when morning enters the room.

    It can break from rejection,
    from hands that let go too easily,
    from being almost chosen,
    almost loved, almost enough.

    It can break from loss,
    from dreams packed away in silence,
    from names you no longer say
    because they bruise the mouth.

    It can break from betrayal,
    from trust split clean down the middle,
    from discovering the knife
    was held by someone you loved.

    It can break from disappointment,
    from prayers that seem unanswered,
    from roads that close
    after you have walked so far.

    But mending comes quietly.
    Not all at once.
    Not like lightning.
    More like dawn loosening the dark.

    It comes in tears finally allowed to fall,
    in breath returning to the body,
    in sleep after nights of sorrow,
    in laughter that surprises you.

    It comes when you stop asking
    why the heart had to shatter
    and begin noticing
    what still beats beneath the ruins.

    A heart mends by remembering
    it was made for more than breaking,
    that even cracked vessels hold water,
    and even wounded things can bloom.

    Simona A. Brinson


    Photo by Ante Gudelj on Unsplash
    ©mylifeinword.com All rights reserved.


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  • A POEM A DAY 255

    A POEM A DAY 255

    July 7, 2026
    Gravitational Pull
    We are all broken in one
    way or another, though some of us
    won’t admit it, and we gravitate
    towards the brokenness in others.
    We gravitate to those people, places
    or things in which we see pieces of
    ourselves.
    A cracked laugh.
    A tired smile.
    A silence that sounds like home.
    We recognize the ache
    before anyone names it,
    feel the pull before we understand
    that sometimes broken things
    are only searching for where they belong.

    Simona A. Brinson

    Photo by Recep Tayyip EROĞLU on Unsplash

    ©mylifeinword.com All rights reserved.

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  • A POEM A DAY 254

    A POEM A DAY 254

    July 6, 2026
    Even Seeds Split Stone
    You ever feel so small
    That even a mustard seed appears mountainous,
    and no one notices
    how hard you are fighting just to stand?
    Like the floor has swallowed your shadow,
    like your voice has folded itself
    into the corner of your chest,
    too tired to ask for room.
    You smile because people expect sunrise,
    but inside, clouds keep gathering,
    heavy and gray,
    pressing rain behind your eyes.
    You carry whole storms quietly,
    tuck thunder beneath your tongue,
    and still answer, “I’m fine,”
    when your spirit is crawling.
    Some days, hope feels far away,
    a tiny thing on a distant hill,
    but still, you reach for it—
    one breath, one prayer, one trembling step.
    Because even small things survive.
    Even seeds split stone.
    Even the smallest faith
    can rise, root, and grow.

    Simona A. Brinson

    Photo by Ruedi von Erlach on Unsplash

    ©mylifeinword.com All rights reserved.

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  • A POEM A DAY 253

    A POEM A DAY 253

    July 5, 2026
    Mercy in a Bottle
    He raised the glass
    like a prayer
    no church could hear.
    The whiskey burned,
    but for a moment
    it quieted
    the names of old regrets.
    At the bottom of the bottle,
    he searched for forgiveness,
    mistaking numbness
    for peace.
    Morning came,
    and mercy was gone—
    leaving only
    an empty bottle
    and a thirst
    it could never satisfy.
    Tomorrow,
    he will lift the same glass,
    chase the same ghost,
    and call it hope once more—
    only to find
    the same empty bottle,
    the same unanswered ache,
    the same lonely ending.

    Simona A. Brinson

    Photo by Europeana on Unsplash

    ©mylifeinword.com All rights reserved.

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  • Independence, Deferred

    Independence, Deferred

    July 4, 2026
    Independence is spoken as if it is finished
    as if it arrived in a single year
    and stayed whole ever since.

    But freedom does not settle evenly.
    It gathers in certain streets, certain voices, certain names
    while others remain rehearsed in caution
    learning the shape of being watched.

    A celebration can light the sky
    and still leave shadows on the ground.
    Fireworks do not reach the neighborhoods
    where opportunity moves slowly
    or not at all.

    There are people who are told they belong
    and still must prove it again tomorrow.
    There are people who inherit liberty
    and others who inherit suspicion.

    If one life is restricted by poverty,
    another by profiling,
    another by the quiet weight of prejudice
    then independence is not complete.
    It is partial, conditional, unfinished.

    The day marked as freedom
    holds within it a quieter truth:
    that freedom is not a possession,
    but a shared condition
    and when it is denied to one
    it is diminished for all.

    So the sky still blooms with color
    and the nation still calls it joy,
    but beneath the noise there are questions
    that do not fade with the light.

    Who is free today.
    Who is still waiting.
    And what would it mean
    for the celebration to finally include everyone.

    Simona A. Brinson

    Photo by Mario Sessions on Unsplash

    ©mylifeinword.com All rights reserved.

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  • A POEM A DAY 252

    A POEM A DAY 252

    July 3, 2026
    Where the Fog Keeps Your Name
    The cabin waits
    where the hill surrenders
    to the hands of mist,
    its weathered walls
    still holding the breath
    of forgotten winters.

    The trees stand like old mourners,
    their black limbs
    lifted toward a heaven
    that no longer answers.
    Even the wind
    moves softly here,
    as though afraid
    to wake the dead.

    I found you
    on a morning
    the world had hidden itself.
    The fog wrapped around your shoulders
    like a bridal veil,
    and your smile
    was the only warm thing
    the valley remembered.

    We loved
    as abandoned places love—
    without witnesses,
    without promises
    the world could understand.
    Our hearts became candles
    burning in a house
    already claimed by shadows.

    But time is faithful
    only to endings.

    Now I climb this lonely path
    where moss swallows footprints
    and silence grows
    between the roots.
    The door hangs open
    just enough
    to suggest
    someone has only just left.

    Sometimes I imagine
    you still waiting inside,
    your hands resting
    upon the windowsill,
    watching the fog
    erase my outline
    before I reach you.

    Sometimes I hear
    your laughter
    woven into the branches,
    so soft
    I mistake it
    for rain.

    The mist never tells me
    whether you died,
    or simply became
    part of the mountain.

    So I return
    whenever dawn forgets
    to become day,
    bringing flowers
    that bloom only in memory,
    speaking your name
    into the gray silence
    until it echoes back
    like a vow
    spoken inside
    an empty chapel.

    If love survives anywhere,
    it is here—

    in forgotten cabins,
    in ancient trees,
    in the cold breath of morning,

    where every ghost
    is only someone
    who loved too deeply
    to leave.

    Simona A. Brinson


    Photo by m wrona on Unsplash
    ©mylifeinword.com All rights reserved.

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  • A POEM A DAY 251

    A POEM A DAY 251

    July 2, 2026
    Dew Drops and Sunshine
    Before the morning finds its voice,
    the meadow wears a crown of glass.
    Each blade of grass lifts silver pearls,
    small miracles that never last.

    The dew arrives without a sound,
    borrowed from the hush of night,
    holding tiny worlds inside
    until they meet the morning light.

    Then sunshine spills across the hills,
    a river poured from skies above.
    It kisses every waiting drop
    with quiet warmth and patient love.

    The diamonds tremble, glow, and fade,
    returning softly to the air,
    teaching that the loveliest things
    are often those we cannot keep or wear.

    Still every dawn begins again—
    fresh jewels stitched on leaf and vine,
    a promise written by the earth
    in dew drops and in sunshine.

    So may my heart be like the field,
    open to both loss and grace,
    catching every drop of hope
    before the day begins its race.

    For even fleeting beauty leaves
    a light that time cannot outshine;
    the soul remembers morning's gift—
    those humble dew drops,
    that faithful sunshine.

    Simona A. Brinson


    Photo by Jonas Weckschmied on Unsplash
    ©mylifeinword.com All rights reserved.

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  • A POEM A DAY 250

    A POEM A DAY 250

    July 1, 2026
    A Garden Tainted
    My heart is already
    a garden tainted
    by your deceit
    and your lies.
    Even when I close my eyes,
    I still see them—
    the shadows you planted,
    the words you twisted,
    the truth you buried
    beneath your careful smile.
    Your lies do not leave quietly.
    They rise like smoke
    from the ground of me,
    staining every place
    I once believed was safe.
    I wanted to trust
    the sky of you,
    the open field,
    the soft promise
    of your hands.
    But deceit has wings.
    Trickery knows how to fly.
    It circles back
    when I am alone,
    lands heavy on my chest,
    and reminds me
    that betrayal does not end
    just because the mouth
    stops speaking.
    Now I walk through myself
    like a ruined garden,
    touching what remains,
    naming what still lives.
    My heart is tainted, yes—
    but not destroyed.
    Even wounded ground
    remembers how to bloom.

    Simona A. Brinson

    Photo by Prometheus 🔥 on Unsplash

    ©mylifeinword.com All rights reserved.

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