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“With every goodbye, you learn…” 🌻 🌷

Some poems don’t arrive loudly. They settle in quietly, like something you already knew but hadn’t found words for yet.

“After a While,” often shared and sometimes misattributed, is one of those pieces. It doesn’t try to explain love or loss—it simply reflects what time tends to reveal when we’ve been through both.

You might read it quickly… but it lingers differently if you let it.

———-

After a while you learn
the subtle difference between
holding a hand and chaining a soul

and you learn
that love doesn’t mean leaning
and company doesn’t always mean security.

And you begin to learn
that kisses aren’t contracts
and presents aren’t promises

and you begin to accept your defeats
with your head up and your eyes ahead
with the grace of woman, not the grief of a child

and you learn
to build all your roads on today
because tomorrow’s ground is
too uncertain for plans
and futures have a way of falling down
in mid-flight.

After a while you learn
that even sunshine burns
if you get too much

so you plant your own garden
and decorate your own soul
instead of waiting for someone
to bring you flowers.


And you learn that you really can endure
you really are strong
you really do have worth
and you learn
and you learn
with every goodbye, you learn…

Written by: by Veronica Shoffstall
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Northwest · M
Yes, but what if everything works out? Ask King George III. I mean other than that one major f'up in the colonies, he did not even have a mistress, official or not, and had 17 kids with his wife.
@Northwest
Lucky him, for he didn’t have to go back to find someone else from the dating pool.
Northwest · M
@CookieCrumbs
Lucky him

What are the odds though. He was looking for a minor nobility, from a small German town, who has never expressed an opinion of her own.

Oh, wait, I'm starting to see the problem.
BrandNewMan · 61-69, M
This landed as lessons learned should.
@BrandNewMan
They are. With every goodbye, we should see past the pain of loss. We should see what we learned from the experience with the situation or person.
Ontheroad · M
How quietly an softly (even with the sorrows), this built into a beautiful becoming that would never have happened without those goodbyes.

I love this.
@Ontheroad
Goodbyes are part of our everyday. We say goodbye to people, memories, habits, possibilities, etc.
The moment we realize how easily we could lose whatever it is we have or are holding on to, we become either more appreciative or more detached to avoid the pain of loss.

 
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