The Quiet That Saved Me…

Daily writing prompt
Describe one habit that brings you joy.

It is funny how the word habit often gets a bad rap. We tend to think of it as something dull or mechanical, brushing teeth, checking emails, biting your nails. Something we do without thinking.

But habits are much more than unconscious repetition. They’re patterns we carve into our days, grooves in time, and, over the years, they shape our experience of the world. Some habits dull us, sure. But others keep us tethered to meaning. To self-hood. To love.

A habit, at its best, is a kind of ritual. A sacred rhythm. Something you return to not because you have to, but because your soul knows there’s nourishment there.

For me, that habit is waking up early.

It began years ago when I was minding my dad. He didn’t sleep well throughout his dementia, but towards those 2 years at the end, he did. The beginning of his dementia was a rough ride, and the days were long and full of care to the end. But the early mornings, those were mine. The quiet before the house stirred was a blessing. I’d make tea in the half-light and breathe. Just breathe.

It was the one hour I could hear myself think, before my energy was given over to someone I cared for. And though I didn’t know it then, I was forming a habit of honoring that quiet, a kind of morning vigil that was as much about survival as it was about stillness.

Now, years later, he’s gone. But the habit has stayed.

These days, I’m still up early, though now it’s my dog – Heff- old, blind, and bloody demanding who starts the commotion, usually with a loud bark and a look that says, “You’re late, woman.” First, he needs out, then he demands breakfast like a small, furry overlord. And while the details have changed, the feeling is the same.

Strangely, I sometimes feel like my dad’s still part of it. Like it’s him nudging the dog awake, nudging me toward the quiet, still looking after me the way I once looked after him. Maybe some habits carry echoes of those we’ve loved and lost. Or maybe they become ways of staying connected.

And so, each morning, I find myself by the window with a mug in hand, wrapped in silence. I watch the sky shift, the birds stir, the trees stand steady. There’s no rush. Just presence.

And maybe that’s the real joy: not the act of rising early, but what it makes space for. Stillness. Gratitude. Memory. A softness around the edges of grief. A conversation with the day before it begins.

We often think of habits as things that control us. But the right ones? The soul-chosen ones? They gently hold us, like a rhythm we can rest inside.

So yes, I have a habit (one of many!). And I’ll keep it. It brings me joy, not because it’s routine, but because it reminds me that I’m alive… and still listening.


Comments

15 responses to “The Quiet That Saved Me…”

  1. Joey Jones Avatar
    Joey Jones

    A lovely way to start the day

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Ah, once again the importance of presence.

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Touching and shows the importance of making memories that last.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Aw Ty Pepper xx 🧡

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Adore this and I agree. Habits do get a bad wrap, they can be rituals felt in the silence🫶🏼

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you JAM 🧡 I love how you said that,rituals felt in the silence… yes. Some habits aren’t about control, they’re about grounding. Little quiet anchors in the chaos.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. That was a beautiful post. Caring for a loved one who is ill like that is so so hard. Sounds like you developed some superb coping mechanisms. ❤️

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Thank you so much Paul🧡 It was one of the hardest seasons of my life, but it taught me a lot,mostly about love, limits, and what really matters. The coping mechanisms came from survival… and a bit of stubborn grace.

      Like

  6. Love this post Mae and really enjoyed reading it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Mags xx 🧡

      Liked by 1 person

  7. Wow I am quite opposite, don’t mind , I love my habit of sleeping late and waking late 😂 . It is so interesting that how one fav habit of one person can be unfav of another 😂😂. LOVED YOUR WRITING 😁😀,it is sweet .

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ha ha, I love that IF-! 😂 That’s what makes it all so great, we’re all wired so differently. Your favorite habit would absolutely wreck me, and mine would probably feel like torture to you!
      But that’s the beauty of it, right? Glad it made you smile, and thanks for the lovely words 🧡

      Liked by 1 person

  8. Mae, this post brought tears to my eyes. It’s just wonder! How we two in two different worlds underwent the same experiences and hankered after that soul stilling quietude to feel that we are alive.

    My mother was also a profound dementia patient. So I know what you are talking about. I too had Rinky old and demanding who just left for heavenly abode after mother passed away. Now there is silence but somehow I find peace in it. It seems you do the same. Like a blessed tranquility after an earth quivering storm. But still there is a presence… A sacred presence who is watching, guiding and smiling from somewhere above.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh, your message really touched me… Thank you. It’s strange, isn’t it? How two people worlds apart can walk such a similar road. That “soul-stilling quietude” you speak of—yes, I know it well.

      I’m so sorry to hear about your mum, Geeta… and about Rinky too. It’s heartbreaking how the silence that follows can be both a relief and an ache. But you’ve said it beautifully, there is a sacred presence, isn’t there? A sort of soft knowing that they’re still around us somehow.

      Sending you love and light in that stillness… and thank you again for sharing your heart with me.
      🧡

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