The Space Between
In the silence between naps and cries, I’m learning to find myself again

There’s a hush in the room—
a sacred silence when she sleeps.
Not peace, but a question,
a pause in the middle of myself.
The books lie open, unwritten.
The page waits.
The words I once longed to drown in
stand still, like strangers in the hall,
while I hover near—unsure
if I should enter.
I used to know myself
in chapters, in sentences,
in deadlines and degrees.
Now I measure time in naps,
in cries,
in the soft weight of her needing me.
And I wonder—
if I gave my whole heart to the page,
would I resent the tiny hands
that pull me away?
Would I ache for what I couldn’t finish,
or learn to breathe in the fragments?
Maybe this is the work.
Not the stories left undone,
but the soul—undone and remade
in the quiet surrender of being hers.
I mourn the girl who chased bylines,
whose name meant something on paper.
But I honor the woman
who answers to Mama,
who finds strength in lullabies
and long nights.
Sacrifice isn’t glamorous.
It’s silent.
Lonely.
Slow.
It’s the stretching of spirit
in a world that doesn’t clap
for what no one sees.
But growth was never meant to feel like glory.
It feels like letting go,
again and again—
and trusting that losing yourself
might be how you find
something far more whole.
About the Creator
Carolina Borges
I've been pouring my soul onto paper and word docs since 2014
Poet of motherhood, memory & quiet strength
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