Making Room for Wanting: love, privacy, and the unsaid

February arrives with its loud-hearted instructions: roses, reservations, and grand declarations. But these days I’m living inside a quieter register of love; the one I’m meeting through the world I’m writing. I’m learning that in some seasons, love doesn’t perform. It practices.

Making Room for Wanting

Writing into an apartheid-era South Africa has me thinking about wanting. Because then, wanting often had to negotiate with distance, ambition, silence, and the public gaze. When the world feels watchful, how does wanting find room? How does it learn to speak without being overheard? Underneath the romance, there’s always something more essential: the desire for connection, freedom, and peace.

Visibility and the Unsaid

We have the idiom, wear your heart on your sleeve, a display of affection and devotion. It’s a beautiful notion. But visibility can be risky, depending on the time and place you’re living in, and the rules written (and unwritten) around your body and your belonging. In South Africa, even love—across racial lines—was policed by law for decades. And beyond the law, there was the everyday reality of scrutiny: who can love whom, who is allowed to show public display of affection, who is watched.

Quiet Intimacy as Refuge

I can only imagine what that did to love. Still, love didn’t disappear; it adapted and learned new languages. Some love stories couldn’t be written in roses, but in repetitions—in the act of showing up again and again, saying I choose you, regardless.

So how did that showing up look? I can’t say I know for sure. But I imagine quiet intimacy as refuge: shared meals, borrowed time after the children sleep, a slow tune on a vinyl record player. I imagine that making room wasn’t only emotional but logistical too. Love needed privacy, cover, and timing to breathe.

And what continues to captivate me, as I write, is the tenderness people still made possible: the small gestures that kept love alive; the choice to soften rather than harden; the way rituals—small, repeated, ordinary—became devotion.

What This Teaches Us Now

When I think about my own childhood, shared rituals made home feel like love: coming together for meals, song, storytelling, laughter, and a bit of prayer too. Maybe it was Valentine’s every day, who knows! But what I know for sure is that love wasn’t always loud; it lived in private moments, where unspoken gestures said what words didn’t.

Even today, and all over the world, love continues to be “policed” by social and systemic expectations for individuals who don’t fit the traditional and “ideal” couple model. And when we focus on a single highly commercialised day, we risk taking for granted the daily, consistent effort required to keep love alive.

This is why I’m leaning into my year’s practice: Making Room for small yeses, for tenderness, for the brave quiet work of choosing each other every day.

So, I’ll leave you with this question to ponder: What quiet ritual keeps your love alive, and how could you honour it as real romance?

PS. Photo by Jamie Street on Unsplash.

I Am a Writer: A Refrain for the Unbowed

I am a writer
Words are the tools
I gather to tell stories

I am a writer
Words are the weapons
I pick up to fight injustice

I am a writer
Words are the imagination
I wield to make rainbows from storms

I am a writer
Words are the voice
I call out half-truths and lies

I am a writer
Words are the candles
I light to find beauty in the dark

I am a writer
Words are the lanterns
I burn to bring hope in times of despair

I am a writer
Words are the home
I return to every single day

PS. Thank you, Rachael Herron, for reminding me I am, and always have been a writer, and that I can use my words for good. It’s easy to forget we have agency when we’re feeling overwhelmed. Whatever your medium, dear reader, you too can use it to turn storms into rainbows.

PPS. Image is one of my AI creations.

A Word Arrives Like A Bird

I often joke that if there’s such a thing as an afterlife, I’ll definitely come back as a swan. It’s my favourite bird. I love everything about it: the elegance, the quiet authority, the way it seems to float through the world like it already knows something the rest of us are still trying to learn.

Swans, though, aren’t native to South Africa. Mute and black swans exist mainly as introduced or captive birds. In a small way, I recognise myself in that as I’m not native to Finland either. Though definitely not a captive, I was introduced. And I had to adapt in order to make the place my home.

The Whooper Swan, national bird of Finland (photo taken in summer)

Another bird has been knocking at the doors of my dream-consciousness lately: the flamingo. I never thought I liked flamingos that much. They always seemed a little… full of themselves? A bit too posed; too aware of the camera. And yet there it was, returning again and again, bright and persistent.

Then one day, as I was reading the Marginalia newsletter, a flamingo appeared in a poem. The words found me exactly where I was. One thing I love most about poetry is that it doesn’t knock politely; it walks right in and sits beside you.

Before I knew it, I was deep in a rabbit hole, researching this bird. Flamingos are native to South Africa. The Greater Flamingo is widespread and found across parts of Africa. And as I read, I kept seeing the same qualities named again: beauty, grace, balance, confidence. And I thought, hang on! These are exactly the qualities I love about the swan.

Though both birds are vocal, there’s a difference that matters. The swan is serene and tends to exhibit profound emotional behaviours, like mourning its partner. The flamingo, on the other hand, is communal, loud and quirky. And what about that one-legged balancing pose?

The Flamingo, Photo by Benjamin Chambon on Unsplash

Then—dang! Yoga. What? I hate yoga. It makes me angry. But my creaky joints and stiff body keep saying: girl, you need to get yourself flexible. So this is my word for 2026: Flexible. After a year of targeted focus, flexibility is the energy I want this year.

I’m practicing flexibility not just in the physical sense (though yes, unfortunately, also that) but in my days, and on the page. I’m making room for the small yeses — to soften where I’ve been rigid, to experiment and adapt, to not force neat answers before they’re ready — and see where I end up.

I once read that swans, with their famously long and bendable necks, have more capacity for curving and rearranging themselves without losing their shape. Maybe I won’t reach swan-level flexibility, but there will be movement with one small yes at a time.

Who knows! I might end up settling for a humble flamingo pose, just so I don’t fall flat on my face. I hope you stay with me.

An image of mallards (non-migratory birds) on an icy lake


As usual, I’d love to hear your thoughts. What are you making room for this year or where could a little more flexibility soften your life in the best way?

PS. The Great Tit is among birds that brave the Finnish winter. They are always nearby, flitting from tree to feeder, drawn by the tasty seeds. And I created the watercolour feature image using Canva AI.