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A Letter to Anyone Who Thinks Love Has to Be Grand
This letter is for anyone who has been taught to look for love only in grand gestures. It gently reminds us that love often lives in the quietest places: the remembered detail, the steady presence, the everyday kindness, the hand reaching for yours without needing attention. Real love does not always arrive loudly. Sometimes it stays softly, in the small acts that make life feel warmer, safer, and more deeply shared.

Astrid Morwen
4 min read
A Letter to Anyone Trying to Understand Modern Poetry
Modern poetry does not have to be confusing or distant. This article gently explains how contemporary poetry works, why it often uses simple language, and how meaning can live in feeling, image, silence, and honesty. It is for readers who want to understand poetry without feeling intimidated. Modern poetry is not about solving a puzzle perfectly. It is about noticing what the words awaken in you.

Astrid Morwen
6 min read
A Letter To Anyone Who Feels Stuck & Knows Something Needs to Change
This letter is for the person who feels stuck, but senses that something inside them is asking for change. It speaks to the quiet discomfort of outgrowing a place, habit, relationship, or version of yourself. Change can feel frightening before it feels freeing, but sometimes the restlessness is a sign that life is gently asking you to move. You do not need to know the whole path yet. One honest step can be enough.

Astrid Morwen
6 min read
A Letter To Anyone Who Is Learning to Begin Again
Beginning again is not always easy, and it rarely looks as graceful as people imagine. This letter is for anyone standing at the edge of a new chapter, unsure but still willing to try. It offers gentle encouragement for the moments when life asks you to start over, rebuild, or trust yourself again. Beginning again does not mean forgetting what came before. It means carrying what you have learned into something new.

Astrid Morwen
5 min read
Why Love Is Found in the Smallest Things
Love is not always found in the dramatic moments. Often, it lives in the little things we almost overlook: a note, a cup of tea, a familiar smile, a message sent at the right time. This article reflects on how true love is built through daily care, quiet attention, and simple gestures that say, “I see you.” It is a warm reminder that love does not have to be loud to be deeply felt.

Astrid Morwen
4 min read
Why Poetry Helps Us Feel Less Alone
This article is for anyone who feels deeply and sometimes wonders whether they feel too much. It reflects on how poetry can become a quiet companion when emotions are difficult to explain. Poetry does not fix everything, but it can help us feel seen, understood, and less alone in what we carry. Through simple, honest words, it reminds us that deep feeling is not weakness, but part of being fully human.

Astrid Morwen
6 min read
Why Do I Overthink Everything All the Time
Overthinking can make even simple moments feel heavy. This article is for anyone whose mind keeps returning to old conversations, future worries, and questions without clear answers. It gently explores why we overthink, how it often comes from a need for safety, and why kindness matters more than self-criticism. You are not broken just because your mind is busy. Sometimes you are simply trying to protect yourself from uncertainty.

Astrid Morwen
4 min read
Why Do I Feel Empty Even When Everything Is Fine
Feeling empty when life seems fine can be confusing and lonely. This article gently explores the quiet distance between how life looks from the outside and how it feels within. It is for anyone who has everything they are supposed to need, yet still feels disconnected, tired, or unsure. With warmth and honesty, it reminds readers that emptiness is not failure, and that even hidden feelings deserve patience, kindness, and time.

Astrid Morwen
5 min read
For the Days You Carry What You Can’t Name
Some days feel heavy without one clear reason. This article is for those quiet moments when you carry sadness, worry, grief, or exhaustion that is hard to explain. It offers gentle words for unnamed feelings and reminds you that not everything inside you has to be perfectly understood before it deserves care. Sometimes healing begins by admitting that something hurts, even if you cannot yet give it a name.

Astrid Morwen
4 min read
Why We Need Poetry Now More Than Ever
In a world that feels loud, fast, and full of noise, poetry gives us a quiet place to return to ourselves. This article reflects on why poetry still matters today, not as something distant or old-fashioned, but as a way of slowing down, feeling honestly, and remembering what it means to be human. Poetry helps us notice the small truths we often rush past and gives language to feelings we may not know how to name.

Astrid Morwen
4 min read
Writing for the Child You Used to Be
This reflection is about writing for the younger version of yourself, the child who wondered, imagined, feared, dreamed, and noticed magic in ordinary things. It explores how childhood stays within us, how creativity can reconnect us with wonder, and why gentle words can reach places grown-up life often forgets. Writing for the child you used to be is not about going backwards, but about honouring the part of you that still needs tenderness.

Astrid Morwen
4 min read
The Art of Noticing: How Paying Attention Changed My Poetry Writing
There is a Mary Oliver line that changed my life. She wrote, "Instructions for living a life: Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it." I read that years ago and something inside me clicked. Not because it was new, but because it was so simple it almost hurt. Pay attention. That was it. That was the whole secret. Before I understood this, I thought writing poetry was about having extraordinary experiences. I thought I needed to travel to breathtaking places, fall into dra

Astrid Morwen
4 min read
A Letter to Anyone Who Thinks Poetry Isn't for Them
This is for anyone who has ever thought poetry was not meant for them. Maybe it felt distant, difficult, or too serious, like something you were supposed to understand but never truly felt. This gentle letter opens the door again, reminding you that poetry is not about being clever. It is about feeling seen, finding words for what lives quietly inside you, and discovering that simple language can still hold deep meaning.

Astrid Morwen
4 min read
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