Quote of the Day – 10142025


Personal Reflection

McCullers was never writing about geography. She was writing about that quiet fracture between who we are and who we ache to become — the homes we build in imagination because the real ones never fit quite right. There’s a particular loneliness in that, a nostalgia not for the past but for the version of ourselves we lost along the way. We crave a place that holds our contradictions without judgment — something both foreign and familiar, like memory speaking in a language we almost remember.

We carry our restlessness like an heirloom. It shows up in the urge to move, to start over, to burn everything and begin again. But what if the places we long for aren’t physical at all? What if they’re the internal landscapes we abandoned — the wonder we traded for control, the softness we sacrificed to survive? Maybe the “foreign and strange” McCullers speaks of isn’t elsewhere — maybe it’s the uninhabited corners of ourselves we’ve been too afraid to enter.

We mistake longing for direction. We chase what’s distant because it feels safer than sitting still with our own ghosts. But the truth is, we’re all homesick for something intangible — the feeling of being entirely known, entirely unhidden. And perhaps the work of living isn’t about finding that home, but creating it — brick by tender brick — inside the ruins we already occupy.


Reflective Prompt

When you trace the map of your own life, what places do you return to — not the ones on any atlas, but the ones that live behind your ribs? Where does your spirit feel most unfinished, most in-between? And if the home you long for has never existed, what would it look like if you began to build it within yourself — from memory, imagination, and the fragments of everything you’ve survived?

7 thoughts on “Quote of the Day – 10142025

  1. This reflection beautifully captures how the deepest journeys are within us, where building our true home means embracing every fragment of ourselves with kindness and courage.

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  2. Our best time was on the boat…………. almost three years of simplistic living, true friendships and not being judged for the car we drove, the way we lived, where we were from, or how much money we had in the bank. Everyone was in the same boat, literally……….. we had a boat and that was enough to be accepted.
    Would we go back? If our health was better, in an instant. However, costs have tripled since we sold up in 2017,many of the friends we made have passed and others moved on or sold up like we did.
    Home is where the love is……….. and that is anywhere with Hubby and the dog.

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