By Mary Ewa
The circle of life is a road no one can walk for another. It is sacred, sometimes brutal, always necessary. Every soul must take its turn in the dance,through laughter and tears, through triumphs and heartbreaks, through the kind of pain that remakes you in silence.
A parent can love a child beyond words, beyond self, beyond reason. They can pray, protect, and provide. They can build walls of safety around them and pour wisdom into their ears. But even love has limits when life begins to teach. Because one day, every child must step outside the shelter of arms that once held them and face the wild rhythm of their own becoming.
No mother can cry enough tears to stop her child from knowing heartbreak. No father can fight hard enough to save his child from betrayal or loss. They can warn, but not prevent. They can comfort, but not carry. The circle of life spares no one,not even those we love the most. It demands that each heart earn its own understanding.
It is a strange and holy pain,to love deeply, yet let go willingly. To watch your child stumble and bleed where you once did, knowing that your silence is mercy, your restraint is love. Because wisdom cannot be inherited; it must be lived. Growth does not come through shelter,it comes through storm.
And so, every generation must pass through fire. Every soul must taste its own share of joy, confusion, and awakening. That is how the circle completes itself,how life ensures that no one remains untouched, untested, or unfinished.
The greatest act of love, then, is not to protect a child from life, but to prepare them for it. To teach them how to stand when the ground shakes, how to breathe through the ache, how to keep their heart open even when the world closes in.
Because love can guide, but it cannot substitute experience. Every child must walk their own circle. Every parent must let them. And in that surrender lies the deepest form of love,the love that trusts life itself.



