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. 🌿

Surviving The Unsurvivable
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Surviving The Unsurvivable

This poem is a meditation on survival as a natural law rather than a personal achievement. It looks to the living world—roots, seeds, stone, and wind—to explore how life persists in the harshest conditions without drama or permission. Rather than centring triumph, it honours endurance as something ancient, quiet, and collective: the unremarkable, relentless act of continuing. This is a poem about life itself refusing to end, and about the deep, elemental intelligence that allows growth to return even after devastation.

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I Love Myself More (I’m Sorry)
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

I Love Myself More (I’m Sorry)

This poem is about the kind of love that teaches you endurance before it ever offers safety, and the moment you realise that survival is not the same as staying. It was written from a place of sorrow rather than anger, where choosing yourself is not an act of defiance but of necessity. This is a poem about unclenching, about returning love to the world without bitterness, and about the quiet grief that comes with honouring yourself when doing so means letting someone go.

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Everyone Just Wants To Be Loved…But Maybe That’s Not Enough
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Everyone Just Wants To Be Loved…But Maybe That’s Not Enough

This poem is about the quiet moment when love ends—not with a fight, but with an understanding. It was written from the space between compassion and self-preservation, where wanting the best for someone no longer means sacrificing yourself to give it. It reflects on the idea that while everyone longs to be loved, love alone cannot heal patterns that refuse accountability. This is a poem about release, about setting something down gently when carrying it has become a kind of harm, and about holding hope for another’s healing even after your own love has gone.

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What Grows
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

What Grows

What Grows is a meditation on care — the quiet, patient work of tending something over time. It began with my love of plants and the peace I find in stewardship, propagation, and the slow miracle of life continuing under attentive hands. As I wrote, it became something more reflective and more painful: a way of grieving the relationship I never fully had, and the story I never got to know. This poem is about gardens both literal and imagined, about the understanding that comes too late, and about honouring someone not by rewriting the past, but by recognizing the beauty of what they managed to grow with the soil they were given.

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I See You, Mara
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

I See You, Mara

This poem is about what happens when resistance gives way to recognition. I See You, Mara draws on the image of meeting one’s demons with steadiness rather than struggle — not to excuse them, defeat them, or banish them, but to see them clearly and remove their authority. Writing this was an act of choosing presence over reaction, friendliness over warfare, and self-trust over vigilance. It is a declaration that peace does not come from fighting what arises, but from sitting firmly in oneself while it passes through.

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The Helpless Thing That Just Wants Love
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

The Helpless Thing That Just Wants Love

This poem isn’t about a person so much as a pattern — the way unhealed pain can twist itself into pursuit, entitlement, and harm. The Helpless Thing That Just Wants Love was written to explore how longing, when left unattended, can become consuming, and how understanding someone’s suffering does not require sacrificing oneself to it. This poem holds space for compassion without access, empathy without self-erasure, and the difficult truth that some pain must be witnessed from a distance in order for safety to remain intact.

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Quarencia
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Quarencia

This poem is a declaration. Quarencia names the place of inner ground I will no longer surrender — the space where my body, boundaries, and truth align without negotiation. In bullfighting, a bull’s querencia is the place where it regains its strength and clarity, not through aggression, but through rootedness. This poem takes that idea inward. It is about claiming safety as a right, not a reward; about power that comes from staying rather than reacting; about the moment you stop leaving yourself in order to survive. Quarencia is not a warning or a threat — it is a statement of permanence.

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Under The Bodhi Tree
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Under The Bodhi Tree

This poem uses the story of the Buddha’s awakening as a mirror rather than a destination. Sitting Under the Bodhi Treeisn’t about reverence or doctrine — it’s about the quiet, difficult choice to stay present with what arises instead of fleeing from it. Writing it was a way of recognising my own moments of awakening, not as flashes of transcendence, but as acts of steadiness: sitting with fear, desire, doubt, and pain long enough to see that none of them are who I am. This poem is about healing that happens without spectacle — the kind that begins when we stop running and learn how to remain.

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(What Do I Do?) Nothing
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

(What Do I Do?) Nothing

This poem comes from practising something that goes against nearly every instinct I have: not fixing, not solving, not turning discomfort into action. What Do I Do? Nothing. is about sitting with what arises instead of fleeing from it — letting sensations move through without immediately responding, improving, or narrating. Writing this was an exercise in restraint and trust, a reminder that presence doesn’t always require intervention, and that sometimes the most healing response is simply staying where you are and allowing the moment to be what it is.

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The Bandaged Place
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

The Bandaged Place

This poem was written alongside my reading of Radical Acceptance, and it reflects something deceptively simple and profoundly difficult: the willingness to look at what still hurts without trying to fix it, explain it, or outrun it. The Bandaged Place isn’t about reopening old wounds, but about turning toward them with steadiness and care — allowing pain to exist without judgment or urgency. Writing it was an act of staying present with what I’ve learned to keep covered, and of practising acceptance not as resignation, but as a quiet form of self-loyalty.

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There is Only This
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

There is Only This

This poem comes from a place of grounding rather than escape. It isn’t an argument against memory or hope, but a return to the body — to the only place where healing can actually happen. When trauma pulls us backward and fear pulls us forward, the present can feel easy to abandon. Writing this was an act of coming back: to breath, to weight, to the quiet truth that now is often far safer than the stories my nervous system is trying to tell me. There Is Only This is a reminder to myself that repair doesn’t happen in the past or the future — it happens here, in the moment that is actually alive.

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Mohini
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Mohini

This poem is about Mohini, a white tiger whose life has stayed with me for years — not as a symbol of rarity, but as a mirror. She was admired, managed, controlled, and called “lucky,” while being slowly erased of choice and wildness. Writing this wasn’t about retelling her story so much as listening to what it reveals about us: how often captivity is dressed up as care, how often survival is mistaken for consent, and how frequently the door is visible long before we’re ready to touch it. Mohini is not an accusation. It’s an invitation — to notice the cages we’ve learned to live inside, and to remember that freedom, while frightening, was never impossible.

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Yet
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Yet

This poem is a vow rather than a declaration of arrival. Yet holds space for incompletion without surrender, reframing uncertainty as movement and becoming as an ongoing act of courage. Centred on a promise made inward—to the younger, hopeful self that still believes—it insists that growth is not measured by speed or certainty, but by the refusal to quit.

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A Beautiful Violation Of My Solitude
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

A Beautiful Violation Of My Solitude

This poem honours a love that enters not because something is missing, but because something complete makes room. A Beautiful Violation Of My Solitude reflects on the quiet astonishment of allowing another person into a life built on competence, independence, and chosen isolation. It is not a surrender of self, but an expansion—an acknowledgment that love can arrive without erasing what came before, and that the most meaningful disruptions are the ones that leave us more fully ourselves.

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Wrong Side Of The Road
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Wrong Side Of The Road

This poem uses the physical logic of traffic—direction, instinct, and muscle memory—to explore how safety learned in one place can become vulnerability in another. Moving between Canada and Australia, it traces the disorientation that occurs when love rewires the body’s expectations, and the quiet devastation of returning to an environment that still punishes openness. At its core, the poem reflects on how learning to let one’s guard down is not reversible, and how forgetting where danger comes from can be the most painful consequence of finally being loved.

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Let The Good In
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Let The Good In

This poem speaks to those who have learned to absorb harm effortlessly while treating kindness as suspect. Let the good in explores the imbalance many survivors carry—how negativity is granted immediate access while praise is questioned, deflected, or dismissed—and reframes acceptance as a rational, evidence-based choice rather than blind optimism. Grounded in community, chosen family, and lived proof, the poem offers a quiet argument for re-learning trust: not by denying pain, but by finally allowing goodness to occupy the space it has already earned.

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I Didn’t Consent To This
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

I Didn’t Consent To This

This poem uses the language of consent and contract to describe a love that arrives unexpectedly and alters the body, the nervous system, and the shape of daily life. I Didn’t Consent To This is not a rejection of love, but an expression of awe at its quiet power—how safety, confidence, and belonging can enter without warning and become essential. What begins as surprise becomes devotion, honouring a partnership that transforms not through force, but through presence.

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Ceasefire
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Ceasefire

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.

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Pursuit Through Systems
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Pursuit Through Systems

This poem names a form of harm that hides behind legitimacy: the strategic misuse of institutions to pursue, isolate, and exhaust a person without ever appearing overtly violent. Pursuit Through Systems traces how authority is leveraged, recycled, and redeployed when one channel fails—how allegations migrate, narratives are laundered, and procedure becomes a weapon. It is not about a single accusation or forum, but about the pattern itself: a sustained campaign that relies on repetition, attrition, and plausible deniability until the target becomes easier to remove than the truth they carry.

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Due Process
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Due Process

This poem examines how harm is neutralized not through denial, but through procedure. It traces the way institutions convert unresolved wrongdoing into administrative stability—how facts are managed, witnesses are displaced, and memory is reframed as liability. Due Process is not about justice failing loudly, but about how systems succeed quietly: by exhausting the person who remembers until continuity is restored and accountability becomes unnecessary.

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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.