All Ears ©️

Good evening, Cicely…

You ever notice how happiness is kind of like an old friend who just drops by unannounced? No warning, no heads-up, just shows up on your doorstep like it’s been meaning to visit for years. And you’ve got two choices—stand there awkwardly, trying to figure out if you’re even dressed for the occasion, or you throw open the door, pull out a chair, and say, “Hey, stay a while.”

Thing is, most folks don’t know how to host happiness. We treat it like a stranger, like it’s temporary, like it’s some fleeting thing that’ll slip away the second we stop paying attention. But what if we did the opposite? What if, instead of waiting for the other shoe to drop, we kicked our feet up and actually enjoyed it?

See, happiness doesn’t need much—a little room to breathe, a warm seat, maybe a cup of coffee. But if you make it feel welcome, it might just stick around longer than you think.

So next time it knocks, don’t just crack the door and peek out suspiciously. Swing it wide open. Give it the best chair in the house. Because happiness isn’t just a guest—it’s the kind of company you want to keep.

I Miss Billy the Kid ©️

At first, it was instinct—a shared glance in a quiet moment, a thought that seemed to leap from me to him. My brother and I didn’t speak of it, but we knew something had changed. Over time, I refined it, shaping the process into a teachable method. I showed him how to still the noise of his conscious mind, how to focus not on the words but the pulse of thought itself. We started small: a single image, a feeling, a memory. With practice, the connection deepened, and soon, silence was enough to share entire worlds.

This wasn’t just communication—it was truth. Stripped of words, unfiltered by the limits of language, what we shared was raw and pure. We understood each other in ways that no spoken conversation ever could. But this bond brought challenges: how much of myself was mine when my mind was an open book? Could we respect each other’s privacy in a space without walls?

I began to wonder if this ability was ours alone. Were we unique, or had we merely unlocked something buried in everyone—a forgotten potential? The more we practiced, the more it felt universal, as if the boundary between minds was an illusion, and we had simply chosen to see past it.

The idea took root: this wasn’t a gift to hoard but a truth to share. If we could teach others, the world might change—not with words, but with the silent power of connection.