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⋆Eterna Children ⋆

⋆Eterna Children ⋆

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An archive of story-scrolls, art, and reflective works for children and their guardians. Curated by @AmouraElanethraZaphire 🌹 🔗 https://bio.site/EternaChildren

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Do you intentionally create screen-free time in your home?
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⭐️Recently, our internet was disconnected for awhile while we waited for a new service. After removing the internet box, something unexpected came to my awareness. The house seemed to become quieter & alive. My daughter and I found ourselves reaching less for screens and more for simple moments together. We sewed little pillows for her dolls, conversed, created, and spent more time simply being present with one another. To be clear, technology is not something I view as negative. My daughter and I share meaningful moments through it. We play games together, learn together, and enjoy many experiences that the digital world makes possible. Yet this pause reminded me of something important. Balance does not happen on its own. It is something we consciously create. In a world where screens are woven into nearly every part of daily life, it can be easy to lose sight of the value found in ordinary moments—reading together, creating together, exploring, imagining, building, baking, and simply sharing time without a device in hand. This experience has me pondering the idea of creating more intentional offline hours in our home. Not out of restriction… But out of balance. A few hours dedicated to conversation, creativity, exploration, more nature walks and presence. As parents and guardians, we help shape the rhythms our children grow within. Technology is part of the world they are inheriting, and there is much value within it. Yet there is also value in helping them remember that creativity, imagination, connection, and wonder exist beyond a screen. Not through fear, nor through rigid rules. But through balance, example, and intentional moments shared together. Some of the most meaningful memories can be created when the devices are set aside and life is experienced directly. 🌻

Happy Mother’s Day to all mothers today — especially to the single mothers who continue to carry worlds within their hands wh
Happy Mother’s Day to all mothers today — especially to the single mothers who continue to carry worlds within their hands while still finding the strength to rise each morning with love. As a single mother myself, I understand that this day can hold many emotions. For some, it is joyful. For others, it may feel quiet, heavy, bittersweet, or even lonely. However this day finds you, may you remember this: The love you give so freely to others also belongs to you. Treat yourself gently today. Honor yourself today. Speak to yourself with the same warmth you so often pour into everyone else. Your presence, your endurance, your care, your sacrifices, your tenderness — they matter deeply. And for those remembering mothers, grandmothers, or beloved women who have passed on, may their memory continue to live softly within your heart. Today can also be a day of remembrance, reflection, gratitude, and quiet love. No matter how this day looks for you, I hope you allow yourself moments of peace, nourishment, and kindness. Happy Mother’s Day🌹

📌 ⚠️ Important Notice https://t.me/Eterna_Origin/15143

Mira crouched low, as if she were greeting something sacred and new. "You came," she whispered. The shoots did not answer, of course. But they stood there, bright against the dark soil, saying enough. Mira did not shout for everyone. She did not rush inside. She simply stayed. She looked. She smiled. She remembered. This was how small beginnings worked. First, they were hidden. Then, they were steady. Then, one day, they could be seen. From that morning on, Mira visited the garden differently. She no longer came only to see what had appeared. She came to notice what was blooming. A taller stem. A wilder leaf. A new bud. A visiting bee. A butterfly resting without hurry. A ladybug walking across a blade of grass like it had all the time in the world. The garden was not only growing flowers. It was growing patience with Mira. Attention in Mira. Wonder in Mira. Weeks later, when the first blossoms finally opened, they were brighter than she had imagined. Pink and gold and violet and blue lifted from the once- quiet patch of earth like a little festival the soil had been preparing in secret. Mira laughed out loud when she saw them. Her grandmother, standing beside her laughed too. "You were right," Mira said. Her grandmother raised an eyebrow. "About what?" "That beginnings can be real before they become visible." Her grandmother nodded. "Yes." Mira looked over the garden, alive with color and movement. Then she asked, "Do you think people are a little bit like gardens? Her grandmother smiled. "I do." Mira looked down at the flowers once more. Then she reached for the packet of seeds still tucked in her pocket. There were only a few left. She held them carefully in her palm. Not everything had to be planted all at once. Some things were meant for another morning. Another patch of earth. Another beginning. And so, under the gentle sun of a growing spring, with soil beneath her fingernails and wonder still bright in her eyes, Mira chose a new place in the garden and began again.

In a quiet corner of the morning, before the day had fully opened, a child named Mira stepped into the garden behind her home
In a quiet corner of the morning, before the day had fully opened, a child named Mira stepped into the garden behind her home. The grass was still touched with silver dew. The air felt soft and cool. Every leaf seemed to be holding a secret. Mira liked the garden best at this hour. In the afternoon, it was cheerful. By evening, it was golden. But in the early morning, it felt as though the whole garden was still deciding what it wanted to become. She walked along the stone path in her rain boots, carrying a small wooden basket beneath one arm. Inside the basket were treasures she had gathered over many days: a smooth pebble, a fallen feather, a piece of ribbon, and a tiny packet of seeds her grandmother had given her at the beginning of the month. "Plant them somewhere kind," her grandmother had said. "And return often." At first, Mira thought that was a strange thing to say. How could a place be kind? But as she stood in the garden that morning, she began to understand. A kind place was one that welcomed beginnings. A place that did not rush the seed and would let small things bloom effortlessly. Mira knelt near the edge of the garden where the soil looked dark and ready. With her hands, she pressed little circles into the earth, one by one. Into each small place, she dropped a seed. One for color. One for surprise. One for the bees. One for beauty and one just because. Then she covered them carefully. Not too deep or too firm...just enough. When she finished, she sat back on her heels and looked at the quiet patch of soil. Nothing had changed. No stem. No flower...no sign of anything new. And yet Mira smiled. Because she knew something had begin. The garden did not look different, but it was different. The ground was now holding a future. That day, she returned three times. In the morning, to check. At midday, to check again. And once more before supper, just in case growing happened quickly. But the garden remained still. The next day was the same. And the next. By the fourth morning, Mira crossed her arms and spoke to the soil in a whisper. "I am waiting," she said. A breeze moved through the garden and stirred the tulips nearby. A robin landed on the fence and tilted its head as though listening. Mira sighed. She had done the planting, the watering, and the watching. Surely that should be enough. Just then, her grandmother stepped outside with two mugs of warm tea, one large and one small. She handed the small mug to Mira and sat beside her on the garden bench. "Still waiting?" her grandmother asked. " Yes," said Mira. " I thought something would be here by now." Her grandmother smiled the kind smile that never hurried anyone. "Many important things begin where we cannot yet see them." Mira looked back at the patch of earth. "But how do I know it's working?" Her grandmother pointed to the ground. " The seed knows." Then she pointed to Mira's chest. "And so do you." Mira held the warm mug in both hands and thought about that for a while. Perhaps growing did not always happen where eyes could see it first. Perhaps some beginnings were quiet. Perhaps roots came before petals. That afternoon, Mira decided she would not only wait for the garden. She would care for it. She pulled tiny weeds from the path. She filled the bird dish with fresh water. She tucked a fallen plant label back into the soil. She poke gently to the sprouts that had already risen in other beds. The more she helped, the more the garden seemed to welcome her. Days passed. Rain came softly one morning and sharply the next. Sunlight stretched longer across the stones. The air changed. The trees changed. Even the smell of the garden deepened into something rich and green. Then, one bright morning, Mira ran out the back door and stopped so suddenly that one boot nearly slipped off. There, in the very place she had planted and waited and wondered, were the smallest green shoots she had ever seen. Tiny. Tender. Certain.

Eterna Children is now on Instagram. For those who feel the pull, You may join🐝 📱👋https://www.instagram.com/eternachildren

🔑You may choose what stands out most right now — then take time to journal on the five things you would want to carry forward through your family line. 🐝

When you think of what you most want to pass on to your children, which matters most to you?
Anonymous voting

I’ve been building quietly behind the scenes for Eterna Children, and I’m excited for what will soon be shared. This space ma
I’ve been building quietly behind the scenes for Eterna Children, and I’m excited for what will soon be shared. This space may grow gently, but it is being created with care, intention, and a long view in mind. Thank you for remaining here. Thank you for staying connected. More news and updates will be coming soon, so stay close, and subscribe if you feel aligned to what is unfolding here. 🐝For now, I want to leave you with a question, What are the five main things you would want your children to inherit from you — not only in the present, but through the generations? 🌞 Perhaps it is wisdom. Perhaps it is steadiness. Perhaps it is knowledge, memory, creativity, discernment, skill, or love made visible in how one lives. Sit with it. Journal with it. Let it show you what truly matters. Because what we pass on is not only what we own. It is what we embody, preserve, and choose to carry forward.

Repost from ETERNA ORIGIN 𓆃
Children were not taught what to become. They were not shaped or corrected. They were held in remembrance. Protected not from
Children were not taught what to become. They were not shaped or corrected. They were held in remembrance. Protected not from knowledge- but from forgetting. Because forgetting was understood as the only true fracture.

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Have you or your child noticed anything in the sky lately?
Anonymous voting

📖 https://t.me/EternaChildren/9960 I haven’t even shown this short story to my daughter yet, so for me it felt like a deep sync. I told her I would show her later after school.

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