06/03/2026
When old wounds keep replaying, they create a trauma field that colors your whole system. Learn how the trauma field forms and the practical steps to dissolve it so you can reclaim your sovereign power. Read the full post: https://wix.to/a6Wflhk
Key takeaways: recognize the field, shift energetic patterns, reclaim boundaries, and restore agency.
Dissolving the Trauma Field: Restoring Your Sovereign Power
When old wounds activate, they ripple through your entire multidimensional system. Understanding how the trauma field forms is the first step in dissolving it — and restoring your sovereign power.
06/02/2026
New blog: Beyond “Biography Becomes Biology”: The Multi‑Dimensional Echo of Healing™ — a concise 3‑minute read exploring how story, body, and subtle energy mirror one another until healing happens at every level. Read and reflect: https://wix.to/5aQkrZ0
The Multi‑Dimensional Echo of Healing
Your biography becomes your biology. Your biology imprints your subtle body. Your subtle body shapes the architecture of your energy field. And the entire system echoes the same story until it is healed at every level. This is the multidimensional truth most healing models overlook — but your body...
04/29/2026
Ready to start a soul journaling practice that transforms how you connect with yourself? Discover a simple, heartfelt approach to begin, tools to get started, and tips to keep the practice meaningful. Read the full guide: https://wix.to/8Ppg0fF
What would you like to explore first—intentions, prompts, or ritual? Tell us below.
How to Begin Your Soul Journaling Journey
Starting a soul journaling journey can be a transformative experience. It offers a unique way to connect with your inner self, explore your emotions, and gain clarity on your life’s purpose. Unlike traditional journaling, soul journaling focuses on the deeper layers of your being, encouraging you ...
03/16/2026
They laughed when the truck driver grabbed the microphone—until one skinny boy stood up shaking and called her the bravest parent in the room.
“Ma’am, the guest speakers are supposed to wait by the curtain.”
The volunteer smiled when she said it, but her eyes had already gone to my boots.
Mud on the soles.
Reflective jacket over a plain black shirt.
Hair tied back with a red gas-station scrunchie.
Around me stood people who looked like they belonged in brochures.
A dentist with perfect teeth.
A financial advisor with shiny cuff links.
A woman from a private clinic carrying a slideshow about “future success.”
And then there was me.
My name is Linda Brooks.
I’m forty-six, I drive an eighteen-wheeler, and I’ve raised two kids mostly through voicemail, highway coffee, and the promise that I would always come back.
My daughter, Emma, begged me to do this.
“Please, Mom,” she said the night before. “They need to hear from somebody real.”
I almost told her no.
Not because I was scared of talking.
Because I was scared of being looked at the way people look at folks like me when they think we don’t notice.
Like we’re useful, but not impressive.
Necessary, but not admirable.
The gym was full by the time they called Career Week to order.
Kids sat cross-legged on the floor.
Parents lined the folding chairs in the back.
The speakers went one by one.
A lawyer talked about discipline.
A consultant talked about leadership.
A software manager talked about innovation and opportunity.
Nobody was rude.
But I saw the drifting eyes.
The polite claps.
The kind of attention people give when they’re waiting for something better.
Then I heard a whisper behind me.
“A truck driver?” a mother muttered. “That’s what they brought in?”
The woman beside her gave a small laugh.
I felt it in my chest the way you feel a pothole through the steering column.
Hard.
Sharp.
Familiar.
Then they called my name.
I walked to the microphone hearing my work boots hit the hardwood.
I had no slides.
No handouts.
No letters after my name.
Just two hands that had gripped a steering wheel through black ice, sleet, exhaustion, and too many lonely nights to count.
I looked at the kids first.
Not the parents.
Not the teachers.
The kids.
And I told them the truth.
“I don’t save lives in an operating room,” I said. “I don’t argue cases in court. I don’t wear heels to work or sit behind a polished desk.”
A few adults smiled at that.
Then I kept going.
“But when the country got scared and the roads went quiet, I was still out there.”
The gym changed.
Not loud.
Not dramatic.
Just still.
“I hauled baby formula when parents were panicking. I hauled canned soup when shelves were stripped. I hauled the kind of medicine people wait on in small towns where there’s one pharmacy, one clinic, and no room for delay.”
Now nobody was moving.
“I missed birthdays. I missed school plays. One Christmas Eve, I ate crackers in my cab behind a dark loading dock because my trailer had to be at a distribution center before dawn. If I turned around and went home, somebody else’s kids woke up to less.”
I saw Emma in the second row.
Her chin was trembling, but she was smiling.
I swallowed and kept my voice steady.
“Last winter, I got trapped in a storm so bad I couldn’t see past my own hood. Two nights in the cab. Engine running low. Phone battery dropping. Forty thousand pounds of refrigerated food behind me. I could’ve walked away and saved myself the fear. But then all I could think was this: somewhere, an older man living alone was waiting on that delivery. Somewhere, a mother was counting dollars in a grocery aisle. Somewhere, somebody was praying the shelves wouldn’t be empty again.”
The financial advisor stopped looking at his watch.
The clinic woman lowered her tablet.
A boy in the back raised his hand.
He looked about thirteen.
Too thin.
Freckles across his nose.
Gray hoodie hanging off his shoulders like it belonged to somebody older.
“Can I ask something?” he said.
“You sure can.”
He didn’t smile.
“Do you ever regret not doing something more?” he asked. “Like college. Or… something bigger?”
You could feel the adults tense up.
Like they wanted to rescue me from the question.
I didn’t need rescuing.
I rested both hands on the sides of the podium.
“Son,” I said, “when people are cold, hungry, sick, or scared, they don’t ask whether help arrived from a corner office or a loading dock.”
Nobody breathed.
“They ask whether it showed up.”
The silence got deeper.
“So no,” I said. “I don’t regret honest work. I don’t regret feeding my family with it. And I sure don’t regret helping keep other families standing when life got hard.”
That should have been the end.
I thought it was.
Then I heard a chair scrape.
The skinny boy in the hoodie stood up so fast he nearly knocked it over.
His face had gone red.
His voice shook on the first word.
“My dad drives nights,” he said. “People joke that he just sits there and turns a wheel.”
His lips trembled.
“He sleeps during the day on our couch because he gave me his room after my mom left. He pays for my little sister’s inhalers. He misses almost everything. And he still says sorry like he’s the one letting us down.”
Nobody in that gym was looking at anything except that boy.
He wiped his face with his sleeve and pushed through the rest.
“So maybe people like you don’t wear suits. Maybe you don’t make fancy speeches. But my dad is the reason we eat. He’s the reason we still got lights on. He’s the reason I get to be here.”
His voice cracked completely then.
“He’s my hero. And I think you are too.”
I have spoken in truck yards.
At weigh stations.
Across greasy diner counters at two in the morning.
But nothing in my life ever hit me like that.
Not because he called me a hero.
Because I knew exactly what kind of shame he was carrying for a father who had done nothing wrong except work the kind of job people depend on and still look down on.
A teacher in the front row started crying.
One of the mothers who had whispered earlier stared at her lap.
A man in a tie began clapping.
Then another.
Then the whole gym.
Not polite clapping.
Real clapping.
The kind that sounds like people realizing something about themselves a little too late.
I looked at those kids and said the only thing that mattered.
“This country does not run on applause,” I told them. “It runs on people who show up tired.”
I pointed toward the bleachers.
“The drivers. The welders. The nursing aides. The mechanics. The janitors. The warehouse crews. The lineworkers. The people who miss dinner so somebody else can have one.”
I paused.
“So when you think about your future, don’t ask what sounds impressive. Ask what is honest. Ask what is needed. Ask what lets you sleep at night knowing you carried your part.”
Nobody whispered after that.
When it was over, kids lined up to talk to me.
Not about trucks, mostly.
About dignity.
About their dads.
About their moms.
About work they were proud of but had been taught to hide.
And when Emma reached me, she wrapped her arms around my waist and said, “I told you they needed somebody real.”
I held her for a long time.
Because the truth is, people don’t just get lonely in empty houses.
They get lonely in full rooms too.
Especially when the world keeps telling them their sacrifice counts only when there’s a crisis.
But that morning, in a school gym with scuffed floors and folding chairs, a room full of people finally remembered something they should have known all along:
The hands that keep a country alive do not always look important.
They just keep showing up anyway.
07/19/2024
🌺The courage to look *within* with loving acceptance, feeling what wants to be met here and now.