Orchids and Dandelions

I’ve been hiding in my tiny space, cocooned with my new sprigs of plants, ready for spring. Axel sprays them daily, watching them grow. Small shoots pierce through the soil, and then comes his small gasp of wonder.

I live my days intentionally through his small joys. His – and his big brother’s.

While Axel gasps at the simplest wonders, my eldest is tiptoeing into the real world – joining social clubs, coming home with an excited fuss over the possibilities of building friendships.

Life is beautiful on my side of the world. It is a privilege to be protected in a space David and I have chosen to nurture.

And then there are moments when I am alone, dipping my toes into the world without my rose-colored glasses. The tears come quietly.

As I was baking for the kids, I listened to a BBC podcast, The Global Story. Fergal Keane was speaking about his experiences as a war reporter, about the book he wrote, about how war shapes a child’s brain.

Maybe it is the mother in me. Maybe it is the way my brain paints pictures when he speaks of these children. But something in me felt pierced.

It was the familiarity of it – the deeply unsettling recognition of how violence settles into a small body.

I remember years ago, when I was still in the field.

I remember how tiny she was, about Axel’s age now.

Two pigtails.

Her mother had escaped violence by climbing out of a bathroom window, carrying her and her baby brother into something uncertain, but away.

She was safe. Or at least, safer.

When she threw up, she said, “tummy awe,” and then she threw up.

In The Body Keeps the Score, I know too well how this can become her truth.

The breaking of two truths:

that violence had already found its way into her little body, and my own quiet gasp of relief that my boys will not carry this from our home.

But I also know this: not all children carry their stories the same way.

Some are orchids – fragile, deeply sensitive to their environment. They wilt in harsh conditions, but when given the right care, they bloom in ways that are almost unbearably beautiful.

Others are dandelions – resilient, pushing through cracks in concrete, surviving where nothing else should.

They grow anyway.

They insist on life.

And sometimes, the same child is both.

I do not know yet which one she will become. Or if she will become something else entirely – something that holds both the fracture and the bloom.

But I hold on to this, quietly:

Her story does not end in that moment.

Not in her small body.

Not in the memory that made her say, “tummy awe.”

There is still time for her to grow – toward light, toward safety, toward something softer than what she has known.

Scribbling through tears and sometimes smiles.

Hoping for gentle ripples of goodness.

-Therese

To My Daughter, If Ever One Day

By Therese Christensen

There was a time in my life when I worked in the field, supporting women who had survived violence. Some days were heavier than others—days when I’d find myself sitting alone in a café, trying to process what I had witnessed, feeling like the weight of their stories had followed me home.

Sometimes, I escaped into romance novels. I bought nearly a thousand Kindle books. It was a safe kind of escape—where endings were predictable, where love was uncomplicated, where everything turned out okay.

But there were days when even fiction couldn’t hold me. Days when the pain I carried wasn’t mine to tell, but still needed a place to go. I was bound by tavshedspligt—a confidentiality agreement—so I couldn’t speak the stories. I wrote instead.

I remember typing these words into the Notes app on my MacBook. At first, I thought I was writing to a future daughter. But really, I think I was writing to the women I had sat with—the girls they once were—before the harm, before the silence.

Maybe I just wanted someone, anyone, to whisper in their ear: You are enough.


🌿 A Note in Retrospect

Reading this again, years later, I notice lines that don’t sit quite right with me now. For instance, the phrase: “If he chooses you as a partner…” feels off. It implies that the woman is waiting to be chosen like her worth depends on someone else’s validation. And that’s not what I believe.

The truth is, I have always believed in a woman’s agency. That has never changed.

But when I wrote this, I was echoing the voices of women in survival mode. So many of them told me they felt lucky just to be the chosen girlfriend or wife. That kind of language can be painful to hear but it’s real. And when someone is in survival mode, logic doesn’t always reach them. What does is compassion. Understanding. A hand extended, not a lecture.

This poem wasn’t meant to be perfect. It was meant to be safe. A quiet offering to women who hadn’t yet remembered their own power– but who were always worthy of it.


To My Daughter, If Ever One Day

Baby,
I know you love him
but never make him your world.

I know you just want to be a good wife,
but never at the expense of forgetting your worth.

I know you value his input,
but never doubt your own capabilities.

I know you’re being understanding of his work,
but don’t forget—you have a life to live too.

You are his equal.
If he chooses you as a partner,
he should see you as one.

Pamper him if you must,
but know the difference between caring for a man
and raising one.

You are not his mother.
You are his wife.

There are things you cannot change about him.
Some lessons come too late to be learned.
So choose wisely.
Take your time.

Know him.
Know yourself.

Marriage is not a marathon.
It’s a daily commitment
to yourself,
to him,
to honoring what you’ve chosen
again, and again, and again.

But since it is a marathon,
you don’t step into it unprepared.
You train.
You rest.
You build your strength.
You know your pace.
You come into it whole
knowing you are bringing something worthy.

Because you are.
And if no one ever told you that
let this be the first time.


Closing Reflection

I wrote this from a place of both exhaustion and hope. And now, with more distance, I offer it again this time with gentleness for the women who are still finding their voices, and for those of us who are still unlearning what we were taught about love, power, and worth.

If this speaks to you, I hope you’ll hold onto it. Share it if it feels right. Or just let it sit quietly with you for a while.

We all deserve to be reminded that we are whole.