What the Bells Remember
If you can't be bold, be italic — life is not about waiting for the storm to pass, it's about learning to dance in the rain. There are things that find their way back to us. A song. A smell. The particular angle of winter light on a kitchen floor. We don't choose them. They simply return — quietly, the way all meaningful things tend to move — and when they do, they carry whole years in their hands. For me, it was the sound of bells. Not a grand chiming from a cathedral tower. Not a department store soundtrack on loop. Four small, rough-hewn cowbells tied together with a piece of natural jute rope, swaying in the doorway of a house in rural Tennessee — and in an instant, I was twenty-two years old again, standing in my grandmother's farmhouse kitchen, and everything I had forgotten about belonging came flooding back. This is a story about what we keep without knowing why. And what keeps us. The First Time I Heard Them Her name was Della. She was my grandmothe...