Sadness and Joy are not Opposites Here
January 21, 2026, Mary Rillens Lee, Mississippi

I had just accepted my dream job. The call had ended, and I was alone with the moment. What I expected to feel was joy, confidence, and relief, but those never came. Instead, tears gathered in my eyes, and a heavy weight settled in my chest.
I questioned why something I had prayed and worked towards felt so overwhelming. Why, at the moment it was supposed to feel complete, I felt undone. The loss I thought time had softened returned, untouched by degrees earned or doors opened. The promise of a little girl had been fulfilled, but the one who inspired it was no longer beside the woman she helped shape.
How strange that grief can return on an ordinary Wednesday. How humbling that the heart remembers even when the mind forgets the sound of a laugh or the exact shape of a smile. I am no longer eleven, no longer trying to make sense of words like prognosis and remission, yet I am still moved by the life I encountered all those years ago. I see her in the work I feel drawn toward, in hospital hallways and quiet rooms, in the way I slow my steps when someone is afraid. I see her in the patients I will care for and in those I will sit with when a cure is no longer the goal. I recognize her influence in the choices I make and in the kind of nurse I am still learning how to be. I see her most clearly in the moments I choose to stay present, especially when staying hurts.
There is something achingly beautiful about that. To miss someone years later. To feel your heart break again and realize it never truly stopped loving them. These tears, both now and from years ago, stand as proof of a life that mattered, of a love that was real, of a calling quietly planted long before I had language for it. The sadness always finds its way back, no matter how carefully I try to outrun it. And when it does, I see now that it isn’t a failure of healing. It’s evidence of love with nowhere else to go. Love that still wants to be given. Love that shaped me.
What stays with me most is the beauty of having something so deeply written into my heart that it can still stir this much emotion. To feel this way is not something to regret or explain away. It means my heart learned how to care early, how to love deeply, and how to recognize suffering and tenderness in others.
That kind of love doesn’t disappear; it changes shape. It shows up in how I see people, in how I listen, in how I hold space for pain that isn’t mine but feels familiar. I don’t carry her memory as something separate from my life, I carry it into every encounter, often without realizing it, especially in places where hope and heartbreak sit side by side.
Sadness and joy are not opposites here. They exist together, giving weight and meaning to the work I am meant to do, both in the small, ordinary moments and in the ones that feel defining. This experience didn’t diminish the moment I worked so hard for. It revealed what it has always been about.
