
I used to think missing pieces were mistakes—
lost buttons, unanswered questions,
corners of myself I should have kept better track of.
I searched the floor for them,
retraced my steps,
held my breath as if stillness
might return what wandered away.
But some pieces don’t fall.
They leave.
Not in anger.
Not in drama.
They go the way seasons do—
quietly, without apology,
certain they have already done
what they came to do.
There are gaps in me shaped like people,
like moments that never learned how to stay.
Spaces where laughter once leaned,
where a future almost sat down.
For a long time, I tried to fill them—
with effort, with meaning,
with becoming smaller so nothing else would slip out.
But absence has a language.
It doesn’t ask to be repaired.
It asks to be acknowledged.
Some missing pieces are not holes.
They are windows.
They let light in at angles
I would never have chosen.
Others are thresholds—
proof that something real passed through here,
that I loved, that I trusted,
that I dared to be changed.
I am not incomplete.
I am shaped.
Shaped by what stayed.
Shaped by what could not.
Shaped by the grace of learning
that wholeness is not symmetry—
it is truth.
I carry what remains
without bitterness.
I honor what’s gone
without chasing it home.
And where the pieces are missing,
I stand—
not broken,
not empty,
but open.
— Flower InBloom
About the Creator
Flower InBloom
I write from lived truth, where healing meets awareness and spirituality stays grounded in real life. These words are an offering, not instruction — a mirror for those returning to themselves.
— Flower InBloom

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