Meet Me in My Words:
Why I Write to You Every Morning
Every morning, I write something new — sometimes soft, sometimes sharp, always true to the feeling in me.
A gentle note, offered with love: these poems are works of fiction. They are not diaries, confessions, or evidence. They are feelings passing through language, moments being processed, emotions trying on metaphors to see what fits. If you recognise yourself in them… well. That’s between you and the poem.
When you subscribe, that day’s poem arrives in your inbox at 11:11 AM, every single day. No scrolling, no noise, no algorithms gently screaming for your attention. Just words, delivered on purpose, waiting quietly for you to meet them where you are.
And if you’d like to linger a while longer, you can meet me in my words below. 🌿
We Tried Our Best-ish
We Tried Our Best-ish is a poem for anyone who has ever technically made an effort—just maybe not a consistent or particularly successful one. It’s a love letter to good intentions, mild follow-through, and the kind of semi-functional adulthood that runs on caffeine, sarcasm, and vibes. If you’ve ever “tried” meal prepping, budgeting, or inner peace and then immediately gave up for snacks and avoidance? This one’s for you.
Time Of Fatigue: Forever
This poem is dedicated to everyone whose default setting is “could nap at any moment,” regardless of how many hours they slept or how many electrolytes they’ve consumed. Time of Fatigue: Forever is a tribute to the deeply personal relationship I’ve developed with exhaustion—equal parts lifestyle, personality trait, and maybe a mild haunting. If you’ve ever been so tired that even your dreams need a break, welcome. You’re among your people.
Googling: “How to Make My Personality Less Inconvenient”
This poem was born at 2 a.m., somewhere between my third existential spiral and my fourth snack. It’s a deeply unnecessary journey into the question: “What if my personality is the problem?” Spoiler—she is. But she’s also funny, self-aware, and just trying her best not to overshare her childhood trauma in the grocery store lineup. If you’ve ever asked Google how to be less emotionally chaotic in social settings, congratulations—you’re in the right place.
Words That Hold You Without Fixing You
Words That Hold You Without Fixing You is a poem about the intention behind my writing—how I aim to hold space, not solve; to witness pain, not rush it away. It’s for anyone who’s ever needed gentleness more than advice, presence more than instruction. This poem is a reminder that healing doesn’t always start with answers. Sometimes, it starts with being seen—and left intact.
A Revolution Wrapped in a Lullaby
A Revolution Wrapped in a Lullaby is a poem about the quiet power of language—the kind that doesn’t need to scream to be heard. It’s about how softness can be a form of resistance, how poetry can disarm even as it dismantles, and how the most radical truths are sometimes delivered with a gentle hand. This piece is for those who’ve learned to use their voices not to soothe the status quo, but to shake it awake.
Rebel With A Cause
Rebel With a Cause is a poem inspired by Jaws by Lights—a pulsing, gritty anthem about owning your power and refusing to play small. This piece is for every woman who’s been called “too much” for daring to move with purpose, for speaking up, for refusing to sit quietly while the world burns. It’s a reminder that rebellion isn’t recklessness—it’s strategy, survival, and the first spark of something better. This isn’t rage for the sake of it. This is revolution with a heartbeat.
The Virgo and the Gemini and a Beautiful Life
The Virgo and the Gemini and a Beautiful Life is a love letter to the perfect tension of opposites. It’s a celebration of everything that makes my husband who he is—his joy, his curiosity, his reflection, his warmth—and how his presence softens my edges and rewrites all the imagined rules I thought I had to follow. This poem honours the harmony we’ve found in being so different, and the way our love has built a life full of creation, laughter, purpose, and magic. It’s the final piece in this series, but just one moment in the story we’re still writing together. Happy birthday, my beautiful Gemini.
This Is the Life We Built
This Is the Life We Built is a love letter to the life we’ve created—one rooted in nature, in laughter, in loyalty, and in each other. It’s about finding joy in the ordinary and extraordinary: from paddleboards and bear sightings to symphonies, soccer games, and quiet mornings in the mountains. It’s also about the kind of love that absorbs hurt without letting it shape us. The kind of love that stays soft, even when the world tries to harden it.
Hibiscus and Laughter
Hibiscus and Laughter is a poem about a spontaneous trip to Fiji—a celebration of how far we’ve come, and the joy of being able to choose something beautiful just because we wanted to. It’s about oceanfront mornings, reef adventures, tropical breakfasts, and the soft safety of being loved without condition. At its heart, it’s about the moment I ruined a dress and you didn’t flinch—because your love has never been about perfection, only presence.
A 3 Carat Black Diamond Ring with a White Diamond Halo
The 3 Carat Black Diamond with a White Diamond Halo is a poem about the day we made our love official—on a sun-drenched island off the coast of Cairns, surrounded by coral, ocean, and joy. It’s about swimming in the Great Barrier Reef, wandering through Port Douglas, and promising forever to the best man I’ve ever known. This poem is a celebration of our wedding day, of the laughter in our vows, and of the rare and radiant love that shines brighter than any diamond.
Smooth Waters
Smooth Waters is a poem about the kind of love that protects without fanfare—the kind that holds its tongue, softens its stance, and keeps the peace not out of weakness, but out of devotion. It’s about a visit filled with unspoken tension, painful memories, and the quiet endurance of a partner who knew how much it mattered to me to keep things steady. This poem honours the way he let the storm pass without rocking the boat, and how in doing so, he reminded me what it feels like to be truly, deeply loved.
The First Day I Felt Safe
The First Day I Felt Safe is a poem about finding family in the most unexpected and healing way. It’s about walking into a room full of strangers and being met not with judgment, but with warmth, humour, and unconditional kindness. It’s about unlearning what family used to mean, and relearning it through people who show up, hold space, and make you feel like you belong without having to earn it. This poem is for the quiet miracle of being welcomed—truly welcomed—and for the man who stood beside me through it all.
Downunder and Yours
Downunder and Yours is a poem about the leap we took—leaving the familiar behind to build a life on the other side of the world. It’s about shared hands through turbulence, quiet corrections over mistaken identity, wildlife encounters, and the kind of laughter that stitches memory to love. This poem holds the jet lag, the steak sandwiches, the crocodile awe, and the deep knowing that no matter where we land, the best part of the journey is being in it together.
The Forest and the Falling
The Forest and the Falling is a poem about hiking through early love—stumbling (literally), bleeding (also literally), and laughing through the kind of moments that become stitched into memory forever. It’s about the weekends we wandered through the forests of British Columbia, building something boundless out of sunshine, waterfalls, and time. This piece celebrates the wild grace of being seen—completely, imperfectly, and still so deeply loved.
Team Us
Team Us is a poem about partnership in its truest form—about learning one another through trial, trust, and time. It began on a beach volleyball court, but grew into something so much more: a life built across continents, with friendship, ambition, and loyalty as the foundation. This poem is for the love that plays hard, works harder, and always shows up—no matter the court, no matter the country.
The Speed of Steady
The Speed of Steady is a poem about how sometimes, love doesn’t tiptoe in—it arrives with quiet certainty and stays. It’s about the way my husband became home before I even had time to question it. From moving in within a month, to inviting my mother into our space with open arms, to building a life full of shared adventures and deep, unshakable love—he has been steady from the start. This poem is a tribute to how fast everything changed, and how beautifully it’s held ever since.
The Man Who Made Me Laugh During Our Vows
For the ten days leading up to Sean’s birthday, I wanted to do something special. Something honest, a little sparkly, and very us. So I wrote a series of poems called The Man, The Myth, My Love. It’s a love letter in ten parts—to the boy who baked me an eggless birthday cake, to the man who built me a life with his hands, to the one who makes me laugh mid-vows and holds my whole heart without ever asking me to shrink it. These poems are messy and tender and true. They are not perfect. But then again, neither are we. We're better than perfect—we’re real, and ridiculous, and wildly lucky.
This first one is about our wedding day. The sapphires. The salt. The sunset. And the way I laughed through my vows because joy kept spilling out of me. Here's: The Man Who Made Me Laugh During My Vows
Wrecked in the Most Beautiful Way
Wrecked in the Most Beautiful Way is a poem about how love sometimes shows up unannounced and turns everything upside down in the best possible way. It’s about what happens when the life you planned gets swept aside to make room for something stronger, deeper, and more lasting than anything you imagined. This is the first piece in the All the Ways I Love You series, written in honour of my husband’s upcoming birthday—because the love we’ve built deserves every word, every day, and every reason to celebrate.
This Is the Body You Gave Me?
This Is the Body You Gave Me? is a poetic meltdown in the face of biology, evolution, and a single, mildly breezy poplar tree. It’s for everyone whose immune system reacts to spring like it’s a personal attack, who’s ever wondered how humanity made it this far when their body taps out at air. This poem asks the big questions—like “Was I a divine typo?” and “Why can’t I inhale near nature without crying?”—and answers them with sarcasm, self-pity, and several fistfuls of Kleenex. Evolution had one job. And this is the body it gave us.
Benadryl And Existentialism
Benadryl and Existentialism is what happens when seasonal allergies collide with a spiral into the meaninglessness of existence. This poem is for anyone who’s ever taken an antihistamine and then forgotten what year it is, who’s cried because their eyeballs itched like emotional baggage, and who’s sneezed so violently they briefly met their ancestors. It's allergy season, and nothing is real. This poem probably won’t help—but at least you’ll laugh while your immune system files another unnecessary report.
Poetry by Britt Wolfe
I publish a new poem every single morning. Or mourning. Depends on the emotional forecast. Some are tender. Some are rage in a nice outfit. All of them are my attempt to make sense of the human experience using metaphors, emotionally charged line breaks, and questionable coping mechanisms.
Let me be clear: these poems are fiction. Or feelings. Or both. Sometimes they’re exaggerated. Sometimes they’re the emotional equivalent of screaming into a throw pillow. Sometimes they’re just a vibe that got out of hand. They are not confessions. They are not journal entries. They are not cry-for-help-coded-messages. (I have actual coping strategies. And group chats.)
Poetry, for me, isn’t about answers. It’s about shouting into the abyss—but rhythmically. Some pieces will whisper, “Hey… you okay?” Others will show up uninvited, grab you by the collar, and scream, “SAME.” They’re moody, messy, and occasionally helpful—kind of like me.
You’ll find themes running through them like recurring nightmares or that one playlist you swear you’ve moved on from. Love. Grief. Identity. Joy. Ruin. It’s all here, jostling for attention like emotionally unstable toddlers on a sugar high.
Think of these poems as an ongoing conversation—one I started, overshared during, and have now awkwardly walked away from. Good luck with that.
This poem marks a deliberate turning point: not self-love declared prematurely, but self-harm consciously ended. Ceasefire frames acceptance as a strategic decision rather than an emotional breakthrough—an agreement to stop treating the self as an enemy while acknowledging that affection may come later. It holds optimism without erasing damage, offering a vision of peace that is tentative, earned, and quietly radical: the permission to exist, unfinished, without continuing the war.