Love, Leslie -or- Working Forward

I used to think grief was a circle I could never escape, a loop that kept me pacing the same ground. In 2015, I wrote about that circle as if it were the only shape my life could take. The end was the beginning was the end. I was trapped inside my own refrain.

Now, I see the loop differently. It is not a prison but a spiral, carrying me upward each time I pass familiar ground. The ache is still there, but it has softened into ritual. What once felt like a scraped knee has become a pilgrimage, each scar a reminder that I kept walking.

I catch myself remembering the arm‑in‑arm image, the longing for someone to steady me. Today, I steady myself through chosen rituals: coffee in Helsinki, the hush of Oodi Library, the glow of aurora over Kilpisjärvi. These are not escapes but anchors, ways of catching myself when I stumble.

The Velveteen friend metaphor still lingers—fur worn away, love made visible through use. But now I understand that archives, too, can be Velveteen: softened by touch, cherished through repetition, made real by the act of remembering. My neighborhood sounds, my winter clothing anchors, my Finland sabbatical plans—all of these are threads in the fabric of a living archive.

Working forward means claiming authorship. It means turning grief into grammar, diary into manifesto, accident into ritual. It means that the loops I once feared are now ladders, each rung carrying me closer to the life I choose.

The backward essay was about survival. This forward essay is about renewal. The pain remains, but it is metabolized into chosen joy. And so I keep writing, not to escape the circle, but to honor the spiral that carries me on.

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