My brother disappeared a year ago, and the uncertainty has been the hardest part. He wasn’t declared dead—just missing. Living without answers felt like being trapped in a grief that never ends, caught between hope and heartbreak every single day.
One week, my therapist encouraged me to do something beautiful for myself, so I visited a flower shop. When the florist asked what the flowers were for, I said, “For nothing.” She smiled and replied, “Flowers are always for something.” That’s when I admitted that I didn’t know if my brother was alive.
The florist paused and asked for his name. After I told her, she softly repeated it and then arranged a bouquet without asking any more questions. As she handed it to me, she said, “These are for him. Not for you. So that someone said his name and meant it.”
Since then, I’ve placed fresh flowers on my windowsill every week in his honor. Each arrangement includes the same small white flower at its center. I’ve never told the florist that it was my brother’s favorite flower, and somehow, I’ve chosen not to ask how she knew.