It sounds like the title of a lost indie film, doesn’t it? Or perhaps a line from a journal kept in a nightstand drawer. For me, it represents the quiet anchor of the past few years. When you become a parent—specifically, a mother to a son—you realize that your view of the future shifts. You are no longer just running toward your own finish line; you are building a starting block for someone else.
Hope of a Son’s Best Friend: Finding Light in the 2020s
My son’s best friend isn’t just the kid who shows up at the door with muddy shoes or the one who makes him laugh too loudly at 10 PM. In a deeper sense, that “best friend” is itself. ----18 - Hope Of Breast Sons Best Friend -2020- K...
He would talk about his best friend. He would plan imaginary adventures. He would draw pictures of the two of them running through fields that weren’t closed, in a world that wasn’t sick.
April 17, 2026 Tags: Family, Friendship, Hope, Parenthood, Resilience It sounds like the title of a lost indie film, doesn’t it
If you are a parent reading this, look at your child’s friendships. Respect them. Nurture them. Because in the economy of the heart, a best friend is the greatest currency of hope you will ever find.
But then, I saw it . I saw the flicker.
And if you are a son reading this? Call your best friend. Tell them they are your hope. Because in a world that is often too loud or too quiet, that friendship is the song we all need to hear. What does friendship mean to you in this season of life? Let me know in the comments below.
Hope is the friend that shows up when everything else falls apart. We all remember the silence of 2020. The empty streets. The Zoom calls that tried (and often failed) to replace human warmth. During that time, I looked at my son. He was confused, anxious, and missing his world. When you become a parent—specifically, a mother to
There are some chapters in life that don’t come with a manual. The years between 2020 and now have felt like one of those chapters for many of us—a time of quiet battles, unexpected pauses, and deep re-evaluations of what truly matters.
Today, I want to talk about a phrase that has been sitting with me: