The Grammar of Almost
On the lives we carry without owing them completion.

The Grammar of Almost
On the lives we carry without owing them completion.
I speak fluently
in could haves,
would haves,
what ifs.
They arrive like ghosts
who don’t mean harm—
just checking
whether I still remember
the rooms they never lived in.
Could have is a doorway
I stood near,
hand on the frame,
feeling the future breathe
on the other side.
Would have is a sentence
that assumes courage
was always available,
as if fear didn’t also
have a vote.
What if is the quietest.
It doesn’t accuse.
It wonders.
It asks in a child’s voice
and waits without demanding
an answer.
But here’s the truth
the past never learned to say:
I did not fail to choose.
I chose with the information
my body could carry at the time.
Every almost
was shaped by weather,
by history,
by the weight of staying alive.
So when the what ifs return,
I don’t exile them anymore.
I set them down gently
and say:
You were possibilities,
not promises.
You were questions,
not debts.
And I am not behind.
I am here—
the one who lived
through the choosing,
not just the imagining.
—
Flower InBloom
About the Creator
Flower InBloom
I write from lived truth, where healing meets awareness and spirituality stays grounded in real life. These words are an offering, not instruction — a mirror for those returning to themselves.
— Flower InBloom


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