The Window She Left Open for Hope..

When I was a child, my mom had a habit that always puzzled me—she slept with the window wide open, even in the coldest winters. I used to tease her about it, bundling myself in blankets while joking that she must have been part polar bear. She would just smile gently and say, “Fresh air keeps the soul alive.” At the time, it felt like one of those strange, harmless quirks I would never fully understand.

After she passed away, the house felt unbearably quiet, as if something essential had been taken with her. While sorting through her belongings, I found a stack of old journals tucked neatly in her nightstand. Wanting to feel close to her again, I began reading through the pages, hoping to find pieces of her I hadn’t known before.

In one entry, written long before I was born, she described a period in her life when she felt trapped and suffocated by her circumstances. She wrote about how opening the window—even in the freezing cold—became her way of reminding herself that the world was bigger than her pain. It was her small act of defiance against despair, a way to breathe, to hope, and to believe that things could change.

As I read her words, tears filled my eyes. I realized that her nightly ritual wasn’t just a habit—it was a quiet act of strength, one she carried with her through life and passed on to me without ever saying it out loud. That night, I opened my own window and let the cold air rush in. For the first time since losing her, I felt something other than grief—I felt her presence, her courage, and the comforting reminder that no matter how heavy life becomes, there is always air to breathe and hope to hold onto.

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