I heard a preacher say once that you never show folks your wounds; what you show them are your scars.
I reckon it had very little to do with people and quite a lot to do with the nature and respect of scars.
Scars, you see are paradoxical little fellows that decorate our lives in literal and nonliteral ways. And you may or you may not detest the story they tell, but the beauty beneath what’s marred becomes to you, far more valuable than anything you might have lost in their acquisition. You begin to appreciate the bitter taste of a lesson learnt through difficulty, and after some time, that age old remedy, the taste fades- the lesson however remains. And you, you become all the wiser for it.
This, I believe is why we do not share our wounds. There are only a handful of people in the life of any man who is equipped to bear the bearing of a wound. It may not always be with grace and dignity, but definitely with enough mercy to consider, to remember that wounds respect no one. And if the conditions are right and you, the one reading this, becomes a part of any circumstance that ends unfavorably, you too will be wounded. That my friend, is a way of life.
But, there is a comfort, a sweetner, if you will, and it is this: wounds can heal. Afterwhile, wounds heal. What was once left opened and uncovered is gradually sealed by time and wisdom.
It remains for a time, ugly, discolored, not worthy of approval or notice or spectacle. For that is the nature of scars.
But when the time is right, you will look at your scar, or the remnants thereof and realise it holds beauty. Not for your pain, certainly not for your struggle or the great cost you had to pay. But simply for the fact that your wound had enough time to become a scar. And simply because you, yes YOU, the one reading this, are all the more wiser for it.
This deliberation has led me to one simple truth,
the beauty of brokenness is not in the shattered pieces, or in the narrow escape of sanity and wholeness; it is not in the rediscovery of self as you are pieced back together and it is not in you. The beauty of brokenness is that there is beauty still.
Friend, there is beauty still.
Wait for it.
Christina.










