When the night leans heavy on your shoulders
and the dark hums low beneath your skin,
when the gravel road of your thoughts
keeps winding you back again—
past the fences you swore you mended,
past the fields you tried to leave,
past the quiet voice that told you
you were more than what you grieve—
come sit here.
On the splintered porch at twilight,
where the sky bleeds pink and gold,
where the air smells like forgiveness
and the stories don’t get old.
You don’t have to speak in sermons,
you don’t have to earn your rest,
you don’t have to prove you’re worthy
just to lay your head and chest
against something steady, breathing—
something human, something true.
We all need somebody sometimes.
Let me be that here for you.
There’s a rhythm in the country silence,
in the cicadas’ steady choir,
in the way the world keeps turning
without asking you for fire.
You don’t have to keep on burning
just to prove that you can shine—
even lanterns need a moment
just to cool between the time.
And I know you’ve heard it whispered—
that you’re running out of days,
that if you don’t become something soon
you’ll get lost inside the haze.
But slow down—
there’s a wisdom in the waiting,
in the long and winding while,
in the way a life can gather
in the space of just a mile.
You’re not late, you’re not forgotten,
you’re not failing some design—
you’re just standing in your moment,
learning how to call it mine.
Lean a little when you’re weary,
when the road is hard and long—
we all need a hand to hold to,
we all need a borrowed song.
Not a perfect, shining chorus,
not a voice that drowns your own—
just a harmony that finds you
when you feel you’re all alone.
We’ll build something out of nothing,
out of laughter, out of grace—
not a mansion, not a promise,
just a small and sacred place.
Our house—
with the screen door always creaking,
with the radio playing low,
with the light left on in windows
just in case you lose your way home.
With bare feet on worn-out floorboards,
with your name spoken soft and slow,
with the kind of love that doesn’t
need a reason just to grow.
And if the world grows sharp around you,
if it teaches you to close,
we will choose a different ending,
we will soften what it knows.
We will teach our hearts to listen,
we will teach our hands to stay,
we will plant a gentler future
in the dust of yesterday.
Take your past out of the shadows,
let it breathe, let it be seen—
it is more than just a burden,
it is part of what you mean.
And when it hits—
like thunder rolling through you,
like the ground won’t hold your weight,
like a landslide in your memory
you don’t know how to escape—
I will stand there in the shifting,
in the breaking, in the fall.
You don’t have to brace forever;
you don’t have to hold it all.
Not because I know the answers,
not because I’ll make it right—
but because I won’t abandon
you to fight it in the night.
And listen—
there is something I have learned
from broken things that still remain:
There is an art to all this mending—
not with glue that hides the seam,
but with something bright and honest,
something closer to a dream.
Where the cracks are traced with gold dust,
where the fractures are displayed,
not as shame or something ruined,
but as something gently made
into beauty through the breaking,
into strength through every fall—
like the pieces didn’t matter
until they shattered after all.
You are not what tried to break you.
You are what refused to stay
in the shape they left you in that day.
And like stained glass in an old church window,
set crooked in a wooden frame,
every shard of you catches sunlight
just a little bit different, just the same.
Red and amber, blue and aching,
every color you conceal—
it’s the light that makes it holy,
but the breaking makes it real.
So when the morning finally finds you,
when it slips between the trees,
when it spills across your fractures
and rests easy in the breeze—
you will see it:
how the cracks don’t steal your beauty,
how they let the beauty through.
How the light does not avoid you—
it is drawn to what you’ve been through.
So don’t hide your lines of healing,
don’t erase where you have bent,
don’t pretend you were unbroken
just to seem more permanent.
There is something far more lasting
in a heart that’s been remade—
in the gold along the edges,
in the places love has stayed.
Time will try to rush your healing,
tell you who you ought to be,
say you’re running out of moments
you haven’t even seen.
But time is just a river winding
through the fields you’ve yet to roam—
you are not behind or losing,
you are learning how to go home.
So breathe—
like the wind across the pasture,
like the trees that bend but stay,
like the quiet kind of courage
that doesn’t need to say
anything at all to prove it—
just existing is enough.
Lean a little—
when the world feels hard and heavy,
when the road feels far too rough.
Lean a little—
like a tired song at midnight,
like a voice that’s almost gone,
like a heart that’s finally learning
it was never meant to be strong
all alone.
And if your light begins to flicker,
if your faith runs thin and slow,
I will sit beside the dimness—
I won’t need it bright to know
you are still worth every second,
still enough in every state,
still becoming something honest,
still allowed to hesitate.
Maybe love is not a rescue.
Maybe it’s not meant to save.
Maybe it’s just two people choosing
not to leave when things cave.
Maybe it’s the longest quiet,
shared beneath a country sky,
with the stars like distant promises
you don’t have to justify.
Maybe it’s the softest answer
to the question you can’t speak—
“I am tired. I am breaking.”
“I am here. You can lean on me.”
Apr 10
Apr 10, 2026 at 10:21 PM UTC
When the night leans heavy on your shoulders
and the dark hums low beneath your skin,
when the gravel road of your thoughts
keeps winding you back again—
past the fences you swore you mended,
past the fields you tried to leave,
past the quiet voice that told you
you were more than what you grieve—
come sit here.
On the splintered porch at twilight,
where the sky bleeds pink and gold,
where the air smells like forgiveness
and the stories don’t get old.
You don’t have to speak in sermons,
you don’t have to earn your rest,
you don’t have to prove you’re worthy
just to lay your head and chest
against something steady, breathing—
something human, something true.
We all need somebody sometimes.
Let me be that here for you.
There’s a rhythm in the country silence,
in the cicadas’ steady choir,
in the way the world keeps turning
without asking you for fire.
You don’t have to keep on burning
just to prove that you can shine—
even lanterns need a moment
just to cool between the time.
And I know you’ve heard it whispered—
that you’re running out of days,
that if you don’t become something soon
you’ll get lost inside the haze.
But slow down—
there’s a wisdom in the waiting,
in the long and winding while,
in the way a life can gather
in the space of just a mile.
You’re not late, you’re not forgotten,
you’re not failing some design—
you’re just standing in your moment,
learning how to call it mine.
Lean a little when you’re weary,
when the road is hard and long—
we all need a hand to hold to,
we all need a borrowed song.
Not a perfect, shining chorus,
not a voice that drowns your own—
just a harmony that finds you
when you feel you’re all alone.
We’ll build something out of nothing,
out of laughter, out of grace—
not a mansion, not a promise,
just a small and sacred place.
Our house—
with the screen door always creaking,
with the radio playing low,
with the light left on in windows
just in case you lose your way home.
With bare feet on worn-out floorboards,
with your name spoken soft and slow,
with the kind of love that doesn’t
need a reason just to grow.
And if the world grows sharp around you,
if it teaches you to close,
we will choose a different ending,
we will soften what it knows.
We will teach our hearts to listen,
we will teach our hands to stay,
we will plant a gentler future
in the dust of yesterday.
Take your past out of the shadows,
let it breathe, let it be seen—
it is more than just a burden,
it is part of what you mean.
And when it hits—
like thunder rolling through you,
like the ground won’t hold your weight,
like a landslide in your memory
you don’t know how to escape—
I will stand there in the shifting,
in the breaking, in the fall.
You don’t have to brace forever;
you don’t have to hold it all.
Not because I know the answers,
not because I’ll make it right—
but because I won’t abandon
you to fight it in the night.
And listen—
there is something I have learned
from broken things that still remain:
There is an art to all this mending—
not with glue that hides the seam,
but with something bright and honest,
something closer to a dream.
Where the cracks are traced with gold dust,
where the fractures are displayed,
not as shame or something ruined,
but as something gently made
into beauty through the breaking,
into strength through every fall—
like the pieces didn’t matter
until they shattered after all.
You are not what tried to break you.
You are what refused to stay
in the shape they left you in that day.
And like stained glass in an old church window,
set crooked in a wooden frame,
every shard of you catches sunlight
just a little bit different, just the same.
Red and amber, blue and aching,
every color you conceal—
it’s the light that makes it holy,
but the breaking makes it real.
So when the morning finally finds you,
when it slips between the trees,
when it spills across your fractures
and rests easy in the breeze—
you will see it:
how the cracks don’t steal your beauty,
how they let the beauty through.
How the light does not avoid you—
it is drawn to what you’ve been through.
So don’t hide your lines of healing,
don’t erase where you have bent,
don’t pretend you were unbroken
just to seem more permanent.
There is something far more lasting
in a heart that’s been remade—
in the gold along the edges,
in the places love has stayed.
Time will try to rush your healing,
tell you who you ought to be,
say you’re running out of moments
you haven’t even seen.
But time is just a river winding
through the fields you’ve yet to roam—
you are not behind or losing,
you are learning how to go home.
So breathe—
like the wind across the pasture,
like the trees that bend but stay,
like the quiet kind of courage
that doesn’t need to say
anything at all to prove it—
just existing is enough.
Lean a little—
when the world feels hard and heavy,
when the road feels far too rough.
Lean a little—
like a tired song at midnight,
like a voice that’s almost gone,
like a heart that’s finally learning
it was never meant to be strong
all alone.
And if your light begins to flicker,
if your faith runs thin and slow,
I will sit beside the dimness—
I won’t need it bright to know
you are still worth every second,
still enough in every state,
still becoming something honest,
still allowed to hesitate.
Maybe love is not a rescue.
Maybe it’s not meant to save.
Maybe it’s just two people choosing
not to leave when things cave.
Maybe it’s the longest quiet,
shared beneath a country sky,
with the stars like distant promises
you don’t have to justify.
Maybe it’s the softest answer
to the question you can’t speak—
“I am tired. I am breaking.”
“I am here. You can lean on me.”