🪷 The Ache of Almost: What Girlhood Leaves Behind
It happens quietly.
You find a ribbon at the bottom of a drawer. A scuff on the wall in the shape of a memory. A letter you never sent. A song that still knows all your ache by heart.
And suddenly—there she is.
The girl you used to be.
She’s wearing your old hoodie. She’s chewing on her thumbnail. She’s asking, with wide eyes and too much hope— “Do I get to become something beautiful?”
You don’t know how to answer her.
Because she was almost everything.
Almost brave. Almost seen. Almost chosen. Almost enough.
She laughed too loud in places that wanted silence. She cried in bathrooms and blamed herself for the plumbing. She kissed wrong. Believed wrong. Held on when she should have let go. Let go when she should have stayed.
She wasn’t a tragedy. She wasn’t a storm.
She was almost.
And no one ever told her that was enough.
No one ever said, “You don’t have to arrive fully bloomed to be worthy.” No one ever said, “You’re allowed to be unfinished and still be holy.”
But I’ll say it now.
For her. For Rosalina. For Liliana. For Petunia. For Abilene. For you.
The ache of almost is not failure.
It’s a garden you haven’t named yet. It’s a drawer still full of ribbons. It’s a story that’s still being written in the shape of your becoming.
You are not behind.
You are not too late.
You are not too much or not enough.
You are simply still blooming.
And that— that is a miracle in itself.















