A couple of days ago, while gazing through the depths of nature’s canvas that wraps the cove of a lake, I joke with my friend that I married my husband because of this place. “I can see the joy in your face,” she agreed.
Although I did not marry my husband because of this “happy place,” it quickly became a site of refuge for me. It is a place where the soft sentinels of pines hug a summer home with the scent of comfort. Here, nature offers us her unsalted waters in a basin formed by a ring of small mountains. My favorite way to enjoy it is simply to sit and be still. To surround myself with the songs of the kingfisher and loons; the perfume of pine needles and campfire smoke; and a panoramic wrap of New Hampshire’s beauty that allows the wind to spread the sun across my skin in a way that makes me forget about the burn. It is the setting that inspired my Warriors of Light book series.
This morning, in another town, I sit with technology on my lap inside a home hugged in an acre of hemlocks, oaks, and maples. Here, the sun does not angle beyond the tops of the trees’ canopy to set the water aflame with light before it disappears into the night. Here, Nature’s floor is a patchwork of moss, dandelions, and prunella vulgaris (also known as self-heal or heal-all), instead of the soft throw of pine needles. Yet, it is all a part of Earth’s body.
This morning of July 5th, I find myself thinking about connection as my mind travels back through our shared and divergent origin stories. America’s origin story, for some, began on July 4th. This celebration of independence from another nation. A separation of one group from another in an effort to pursue, “life, liberty, and happiness.” But it did not begin or end here. There is intricate web of light and darkness that weaves back and forth as it goes towards the center and away. If you travel to the furtherest point inward, you get the source of everyone’s collective origin story. The place before separation. Today, we exist somewhere far away, or so we seem to, divided by time and designated spaces formed by different choices and beliefs.
When I think about America’s origin stories, I think of this web. I think about how one group’s pursuit of happiness led to the destruction and enslavement of others. I think about how my happy place is not really mine. Not because it belongs to my mother-in-law, but because long before it was purchased by my husband’s family, it was “Turtle Island.” It was the home of the indigenous peoples before it became this America that is the home where I was born, but not where all of my cells orgininated. I think about a nation made “glorious” with the muscle of enslavement.
And I think about how so often we opt to forget. To make choices that split the web into sectors of partial histories and partial truths. A partial origin story is not whole. There is no wrap of connection. Instead, there are severed lines with polarized ends seeking reunion. Even though our bodies of biology and chemistry, and our essence that abides by the complex, yet simple laws of physics, are constantly trying to remind us that existence is only possible with connection.
There is a reason why joy runs through me in the song of bliss when I sit at the edge of the lake’s body with my feet in the water sunk into the sand. Here, I allow my body to remember the place of its origin. Here, my cells realize that separation is a ruse of defiance as they harmonize to the heartbeat of the mother we all share. And here, my soul expands beyond the orb of Mother Earth to touch its origin, realizing that the origin is already inside of me.
And here, I allow myself to imagine the web repaired and whole, once again.

How beautifully written, Alethea. . .Thank you.
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Thank you, Joy 💕
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a beautiful reflection 💚
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Thank you, my friend 💕
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That does look like a wonderful “happy place”! It is such a beautiful state we live in… And that is it, we are here for a visit of our lives, but we don’t “own” it. I think we all need to know and remember the dark spots of our past and not over play the good parts. A nice bit of reflection you have in this post 🙂
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Thank you, Trent. I’ve always felt like a visitor here, at best. It’s an uncomfortable feeling living here in such a way.
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In ways I feel like a little more than a visitor, but in other ways I feel more at home when in England or Scotland…
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Scotland is on my list of places to visit someday.
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I’m ready to go back!
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From what I’ve seen and heard I can’t blame you!
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Alethea, I feel your words throughout the fibers of my being.
Lucky me to have experienced the cool clear water, the soft sandy bed, the sculpture of the surrounding mountains, the song of the Kingfisher and the company of little minnows by my feet that made me smile.
How magical it was to share this in moment with you❤️✨
With gratitude.
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I’m so glad you were able to share in it. 💕
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Peaceful, beautiful, and healing reflections. 💜
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Thank you, Carol 💙
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You write so beautifully, Alethea. Thank you for sharing this. Origins are indeed complex. And your happy place looks wonderful.
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Thank you, Barb. It’s a very special place 💚
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Words we all need to remember and take to heart. (K)
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💚
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Alethea, a beautiful and moving study of the complexity of our place in this web of existence. This tranquil place is perfect for quiet contemplation as ‘….my soul expands beyond the orb of Mother Earth to touch its origin, realizing that the origin is already inside of me.’ Wow! Wonderful! Annika xx
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Thank you, Annika 💙
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Powerful insights and a beautiful vision for the web to be repaired and whole, once again. May it be so.
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Thank you, JoAnna. May it be so 🙏
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❤️❤️❤️
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