Brothers in Arms ©️

Good morning, Cicely.

Today’s not about politics or poetry or wild dreams of transcendence. Today’s about my brother. And the ache that lives just beneath the ribcage when you love someone who’s far away—not just in miles, but in the kind of life they now live.

He’s eleven years younger than me. My little brother. But you know how time works—it stretches and collapses. You blink, and suddenly the kid who used to run after you barefoot through the gravel is a man. A husband. A father.

He married a Swede. Moved halfway across the world to build a life she could believe in. And now he’s over there, doing what good men do—holding his family together. Being strong. Being present. Even when it’s hard.

I know his wife’s struggling right now. And I know what it’s like to carry a family on your back while still trying to keep your own spirit from sagging under the weight. He’s doing his best. I see that. I feel that. And I’m proud of him in that quiet, older-brother kind of way—where pride doesn’t shout, it just nods.

But still… I miss him.

I miss the river. The Yellowstone. The way we used to float downstream like we didn’t have a care in the world. Just the sound of water slapping the raft, a cooler full of something cold, and miles of sky above us. I miss those walks, too. The kind where you don’t even talk, just walk, because sometimes words can’t hold everything two brothers share.

And yeah, I want him to come home.

I want to see him throw his girls in the air and hear their laughter echo through the pines. I want to sit on the porch with him and talk about nothing. About everything. About how weird it is to get older. About how hard it is to be good. About Dad. About life.

But he’s doing what’s right. What’s best for his family. And that’s what real men do. They stay. They show up. Even when they miss home. Even when they miss you.

So this is my radio signal across the ocean. A brother’s broadcast. If you can hear me—just know I love you. I miss you. And I’m rooting for you every single day. You’re not alone. You never were.

This is Chris in the Morning, KBHR 570 AM, sending a little warmth to a younger brother in a colder country.

From a Grateful Son ©️

Good morning, Cicely.

It’s quiet this morning. The kind of quiet where the trees seem to lean in just a little, where the coffee tastes more like a ritual than a drink. The kind of quiet that makes you think about where you came from—and who helped you get here.

I want to talk about my mom.

She was with my dad for forty-nine years. That’s longer than most buildings stand. That’s longer than some rivers hold their course. That’s love… tested and weathered and still somehow tender.

Now, my dad—he was a doctor. He stitched bones and mended wounds and carried the weight of other people’s pain home with him more nights than not. But my mom—she carried him. Carried the rest of us too. Not in some dramatic, spotlighted way. No. She did it the way great writers do things. Subtly. Line by line. Always building. Always listening.

See, she’s a writer. Not just of books or essays—but of people. Of moments. She taught me that a well-placed silence can be as powerful as a scream. That stories don’t need to be loud to last forever.

And she was—still is—the best mom a kid could ask for. She didn’t just raise me. She saw me. Even when I was trying hard not to be seen. She let me stumble, let me figure it out, and she always had the porch light on when I came back around.

And now that Dad’s gone… I find myself looking at her with new eyes.

She gave so much of herself for so long, and now I just want the rest of her life to be hers. I want her to write again—not for legacy, not for others, but for joy. I want her to feel how much she still matters, how much there is still waiting for her. Because she’s still got stories. Still got fire. Still got time.

Mom, if you’re listening… you don’t owe anyone a single thing anymore.

What I wish for you now is happiness. Pure, selfish, sunlight-on-your-face happiness. I want you to travel, to write what scares you, to laugh until you cry in places Dad never took you.

You carried us all for so long. Now let the wind carry you. Let the future be gentle and wide and yours.

This is Chris in the Morning, KBHR 570 AM, signing off for now. Sending love to the woman who gave me everything—and who I now wish everything for.