13/02/2026
The last lines 🥲🌿💫🪶💖!
The Light the Mother Bear Carried
In the deepest hour of blue—when the forest breathes slowly and the world forgets its sharp edges—the mother bear rested among the leaves. Around her, the night glowed not with darkness, but with a living hush: blue upon blue, veins of gold threaded through bark and leaf, as if the forest itself were remembering something sacred.
At her side, the cub slept lightly, small chest rising and falling, one paw tucked beneath its chin. The mother watched, not with fear, but with the steady attention of one who has learned that love is a form of vigilance. She had learned this not in a single moment, but across seasons—through storms that bent the trees and winters that tested the marrow of the earth.
Above them, a circle of light bloomed, soft and whole, like a promise kept. It was not the sun, nor the moon, but something older: a remembering made visible. The elders used to say that when a child is born, the forest lights a lamp—not to guide the child, but to guide the world toward gentleness.
The mother bear knew this light. She had followed it once, long ago, when she herself was small and uncertain. It had led her through loss without hardening her, through hunger without stealing her dignity. It had taught her the quiet truth that strength does not roar; it listens.
The cub stirred and opened its eyes. For a moment, it did not understand where it was—only that it was warm, that the air was kind, that the world had not forgotten it. The mother lowered her head, touching nose to fur, and the cub felt what no words could explain: you are held.
The forest leaned in. Leaves shimmered. Tiny flecks of gold drifted like dust shaken from ancient pages. The light above them pulsed, not brighter, but deeper, as if approving of this small, perfect arrangement of life.
The mother bear did not speak, yet a lesson passed between them all the same.
“You will grow,” the silence seemed to say.
“You will walk into cold places.”
“You will learn that the world can wound.”
“But remember this,” the light whispered through the leaves.
“Nothing that begins in love is ever lost.”
The cub yawned, already forgetting the vastness of what it was being given. That was as it should be. Wisdom does not ask to be remembered all at once; it waits patiently, resurfacing when the heart is ready.
The mother lifted her gaze once more to the glowing circle above. She did not ask for protection. She did not ask for certainty. She had learned that the greatest blessing was simpler than that: to be present, to remain open, to pass the light forward without trying to own it.
And somewhere beyond the forest—far from blue leaves and golden air—someone sat awake beside a sleeping child, worrying quietly about the future. Without knowing why, they felt a calm settle over them, gentle and unearned. They rested their hand on the small back rising and falling before them and believed, just for this moment, that love might be enough.
That is how the light travels.
It moves from mother to child,
from forest to heart,
from one quiet act of care
into a world still learning how to be kind.
(Author and Artwork by William Murphy)