From Southern Charms - Pics Of Joy

You click.

The second: a teenage girl in a white dress, barefoot in wet grass. Her arms are flung wide, head tipped back, rain plastering her hair to her cheeks. The caption, handwritten on the border: “First thunderstorm after Mama left. She danced anyway.” Pics Of Joy From Southern Charms

Your throat closes. That was you.

You close the laptop. The room is quiet. Outside, a car honks. A child laughs. You click

It reads: “In memory of the life she didn’t get to live—but dreamed so hard, we saw it too.” You close the laptop

A porch at sunset. Two rocking chairs. In one, an old woman with your cheekbones, your hands, your way of tilting her head. In the other, a man in a feed-store cap—your father, whole again, smiling. Between them, on the railing, a small brass plaque. You zoom in.

Scrolling faster now. A hospital room. A woman in a gown holding a wrinkled newborn. Your face, but older. Exhausted. Beaming. You’ve never been pregnant.