For The Sister Who Forgot Her Own Light ©️

Good morning, Cicely.

You ever love someone so much that it hurts to watch them drift? Not because they’ve done anything wrong. But because they’re not themselves anymore. Because you can feel them slipping—not away from the world, but away from you… and maybe away from who they used to be.

I want to talk about my sister.

She used to laugh more. Talk more. She used to pick up the phone just to say hi, to tell me what ridiculous thing her son did that morning. She used to lean in—like we were part of the same rhythm, the same music. Like family meant something that couldn’t be bent.

But now… things are different.

She married a man I don’t trust. And maybe that’s not polite to say on the air—but sometimes truth isn’t polite. Sometimes it just is. I don’t like the way he talks to her. I don’t like the way he makes her question herself. Like she’s never quite enough unless she’s quieter, smaller, less. And I hate the way he keeps her separated—from us, from the people who love her, from the parts of herself that used to shine so naturally.

It’s subtle, the way it happens. That kind of control doesn’t scream—it whispers. It makes her think it’s her fault. Like she’s too emotional, too dramatic, too needy for wanting the kind of connection that every human deserves.

And I want her to know… it’s not her fault.

She is not too much. She is not wrong. She is not a burden.

She’s my sister. And I miss her.

I miss her stories. I miss our jokes. I miss sitting on the porch with her and talking about nothing while her son chases butterflies in the grass.

And yeah—I miss him too. Her little boy. My nephew. The kind of kid who still believes in magic. I hope he’s still smiling. I hope he still feels safe. I hope he knows he’s loved, even if the grown-ups around him are tangled up in things too big for him to understand.

If I had my way, she’d come back home. She’d pack up, grab her boy, and come back to where she’s seen again. Heard. Held. Where love doesn’t cost you your voice. Where the past can breathe again and the future isn’t built on someone else’s permission.

But life isn’t that simple. People leave when they’re ready. Not when we want them to. And so… I wait. I hold space. I keep the porch light on.

This is Chris in the Morning, KBHR 570 AM, sending a message into the mist:

To my sister—wherever you are—you’re still you. We still love you. We still remember who you are. And we’re still here… whenever you’re ready to come home.

Dial Tone Silence ©️

Separation from Love ©️

There is a peculiar torment in yearning for something that feels both inevitable and unreachable. The thought of meeting her—a girl who might ignite the dim corners of my soul—feels like a specter haunting the edges of my existence. I do not doubt that she exists, but the space between us is vast, not measured in miles but in something far more cruel: the separation of worlds, of hearts untethered and drifting in opposite tides.

The Ache of Anticipation

Love, in its essence, is an act of discovery, but this discovery feels cloaked in mist. The prospect of her arrival is not a promise but a question, an unfulfilled prophecy etched into the fragile fabric of my desires. I imagine her face, not in its details but in its weight—an imagined gravity that draws my thoughts and leaves me breathless. And yet, she is not here. She is nowhere, and this absence is an echo that grows louder with every passing day.

It is not just the waiting that wounds me, but the distance I feel from myself in the waiting. How can I prepare to meet her, to give her the best of me, when the best of me feels obscured by the fog of solitude? This is the gothic paradox of love: to long for someone you cannot see, to prepare for a union that feels as distant as the stars, and to ache for a connection that exists only in the aching.

The Chasm of Doubt

The separation is not merely physical; it is existential. It is the nagging question that seeps into my quietest moments: “What if I am not enough?” The shadow of inadequacy looms over my every thought, whispering that the gap between us is not just circumstance but a reflection of my own insufficiencies. She is a vision, radiant and whole, while I feel fractured, a collection of pieces that struggle to form a coherent self.

And what if she never arrives? This is the chasm that terrifies me most—not the longing, but the possibility of its permanence. To yearn for her is agony, but to let go of the yearning feels like surrendering the last vestiges of hope. It is a cruel choice: to cling to the pain of anticipation or to face the void of its absence.

The Defiance of Hope

Yet, even in this torment, there is defiance. The very act of longing is a rebellion against the emptiness, a declaration that I believe in something more. The separation, as vast and suffocating as it feels, is also a testament to my capacity to dream, to imagine a connection so profound that it transcends the boundaries of my present.

I do not know her name, her voice, or the way her laughter might sound, but I know the shape of what she might mean to me. She is the possibility of light in a world that often feels cloaked in shadow. She is the promise that the ache of separation is not eternal, that the hollow chasm can one day be bridged.

The Dance of Longing

To yearn for love is to dance with ghosts, to reach for a hand that may never meet yours. It is an act of faith, of defiance, and of profound vulnerability. The feeling of separation is a wound that bleeds endlessly, but it is also a wound that reminds me I am alive. For in the longing, in the aching, there is life—a life that refuses to settle for anything less than the transformative power of love.

And so, I wait. I ache. I dream. Not because I am certain she will come, but because the act of believing in her is an act of believing in myself. Even in the separation, there is a kind of union—a union of hope, pain, and the unyielding desire to be known and to know. In this, I find a strange solace, a beauty in the longing that refuses to fade.