Self Love

Don’t expect one person to meet all of your needs. Strong relationships are supported by friendships, interests and sources of meaning outside the partnership. Overreliance on a romantic partner for all of your emotional or social needs creates pressure no one can sustain.

Positively Purging-I welcome your feedbacks in the comments and your likes and passing the real life wisdom on to others as I embark on this new venture of “positively purging“, as I know each of these pieces represents something…

Posted in Reflections | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Boundaries

Your boundaries aren’t just for the people who overstep – they’re for you, they are the close doors that stop you from walking back into rooms that you’ve outgrown. -Michell Clark

Positively Purging-I welcome your feedbacks in the comments and your likes and passing the real life wisdom on to others as I embark on this new venture of “positively purging“, as I know each of these pieces represents something…

Posted in Reflections | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Reflect & Pray

What’s your favorite promise from God? What can you do to keep His promises in mind today?

Loving God, I praise You for Your faithfulness! Please help me to trust in You even in difficult seasons.

Positively Purging-I welcome your feedbacks in the comments and your likes and passing the real life wisdom on to others as I embark on this new venture of “positively purging“, as I know each of these pieces represents something.

Posted in Reflections | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Dear Zoe

I recently finished reading Dear Zoe, a 2004 young adult novel by Philip Beard. The story is told through letters from fifteen-year-old Tess DeNunzio to her three-year-old sister, Zoe, who died in a hit-and-run accident on September 11, 2001. This epistolary novel beautifully explores themes of grief, adolescence, and healing.

While everyone experiences loss and suffering, navigating such profound grief at fifteen is particularly difficult. At the start of the story, Tess is broken, guilt-ridden, and guarded. However, through her letters to Zoe, she begins to confront the emotions she has been masking and navigates her family’s breakdown. The book also follows Tess as she reconnects with her biological father, a dreamer who offers her a new perspective on life.

The author writes with an emotional depth that allows the reader to truly feel Tess’s sense of loss and eventual growth. One passage in particular stood out to me, where Tess describes her grief as a physical weight: “sometimes I still miss you so much it feels like someone is pushing their finger into the base of my throat and I cry” (13). The book captures how one can overcome even the most difficult barriers and describes how a family copes with the void left by a loved one.

I recently learned that this book was adapted into a film, though I haven’t watched it yet as adaptations rarely match the quality of the original book. Have you read this?

I highly recommend Dear Zoe to anyone who enjoys a powerful story about finding strength and resilience in the face of pain.

Posted in Reading | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

dining out

“The days of lingering over a good meal are over. There is a time limit now on tables!” — Josie Watanabe, Seattle

Positively Purging-I welcome your feedbacks in the comments and your likes and passing the real-life wisdom on to others as I embark on this new venture of “positively purging”, as I know each of these pieces represents something

Posted in Reflections | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments