For The Sister Who Gives Everything ©️

Good morning, Cicely.

Sometimes life hands us a little grace. Not loud or dramatic—just a quiet kind of gift. Something that catches you off guard, like sunlight through the window after a long storm.

For me, that grace lives under the same roof.

She’s my baby sister.

She used to be the little girl with big eyes and even bigger dreams, always trying to keep up, always running just a step behind me. Now? She’s grown into a woman with more strength than she knows, carrying more than most people ever see.

She’s a mom. A wife. A sister. A fighter.

She gave thirteen years of her life to Corporate America—Amazon, to be exact. Gave them her time, her energy, her youth. And when they were done with her, they did what systems like that do… they discarded her. Like she was a number instead of a soul.

But you know what? I’m glad she’s out of that machine. Because every day now, I get to see her. The real her. The one who smiles when I walk through the door. The one who fills this house with warmth and life, even when she’s tired, even when she doubts herself. The one who still shows up, every damn day, and tries her best.

She’s trying to be everything for everyone—a good mom, a good wife, a good sister. And I see it. I see the effort behind her eyes, the care in her hands, the love that radiates from her even when she doesn’t say a word.

I love her son like he’s my own. He’s got her light in him. Her fire. Her kindness. He doesn’t know it yet, but he’s growing up surrounded by real love—the kind that doesn’t always have the perfect words but always has the perfect presence.

And if she’s listening right now… I just want to say this:

You don’t owe anyone perfection. You don’t have to carry the whole world to prove your worth. You already are enough. More than enough. You’ve already made this house a home, this life a little softer, this world a little brighter.

What I want for you now is fulfillment. Not just duty or survival—but joy. Expression. Peace. A path that’s yours. You’ve spent so long pouring yourself into everyone else. I want you to remember there’s still a reservoir inside that belongs to you.

This is Chris in the Morning, KBHR 570 AM, and I’m signing off today with love for my baby sister. The little girl who became the woman I’m proud to live beside.

And if no one else says it enough—

I love you.

I see you.

I’m thankful every day you’re here.

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.