A reflection on betrayal, distrust, and the first act that begins to undo it.

What the Well Remembers

They tell you the wolves are gone, then hand you the same skin to wear,

and you wear it because the cold outside is worse than the lie inside.

Someone you loved held a debt over your head like a lantern,

and called it family, called it loyalty, or called it the way things are done.

So now every open hand looks like a fist that hasn’t closed yet.

You learned the math early: closeness costs, and the bill always comes due.

A neighbor’s porch light starts to look like a question you don’t want asked.

A stranger’s kindness starts to look like the first move in a con.

You stopped knocking on doors before anyone ever told you to stop

The silence taught itself to you, one slammed door at a time.

There is a fog where the future used to be.

Not darkness. Darkness has a shape, an edge, & a place to put your hand.

This is the worse thing: no shape, no edge, or a door marked here.

You ask the air which way, and the air has nothing to say back,

and the not-knowing sits on your chest heavier than any answer could.

You were given a religion you never agreed to

Money as the only god that answers prayers on time,

The market as the only church that never closes its doors,

and when that god goes quiet, when the offering plate comes back empty,

there is nothing underneath it. No floor. No older faith to fall back on.

So you grip tighter. Of course you grip tighter.

If you cannot trust the ground, you reach for anything that feels like control

A number going up, a name people recognize, a seat closer to the fire

where the ones who survive seem to be standing, untouched, and unafraid.

Power looks like safety when nothing else has held.

And underneath all of it, quieter than the fear, is the loneliest fact

There is no one to call. Not tonight. Not at three in the morning

when the chest is tight and the mind keeps running the numbers wrong.

Everyone you know is drowning in the same water,

Too busy staying afloat to notice you’re going under beside them.

But listen, the well is not empty. It is only poisoned, not dry.

Poison can be drawn out. Slowly. By someone willing to go first,

Willing to lower the bucket without asking what it’s worth,

To stand in the open with nothing to sell and nothing to take,

until the water remembers what it tasted like before the harm got in.

You do not have to know the way forward to take one step forward.

You do not have to trust the world to trust the one person in front of you.

The path doesn’t reveal itself to the ones who wait for certainty

It reveals itself to the ones who walk anyway, slowly, with their hands open,

one small honest trade at a time, until the fog starts to thin.

Someone has to be the first water that doesn’t betray the cup.

Let it be you. Not because you are unafraid

You are not, but because you have already seen what the alternative costs,

and you would rather risk being burned again

than spend the rest of your life thirsty, holding a cup you’re afraid to fill.

Reading the Symbols

If the images moved you but you want to see plainly what each one is carrying, here is the key beneath the poem.

The wolves they say are gone, and the skin you wear anyway. This is inherited fear. Someone taught you the danger was real, and you kept dressing for it long after you had reason to check.

The lantern held over your head by someone who called it family. This is the way love gets twisted into leverage, and debt dressed up as devotion So that closeness itself starts to feel like danger.

The slammed doors and the silence that taught itself to you. This is how distrust becomes automatic. You stop knocking not because someone told you to, but because disappointment repeated itself enough times that it became a reflex. No instructions required.

The fog where the future used to be. This is the loss of any visible path forward. Not darkness, which at least has edges to feel your way along. But a directionless blur where every question you ask gets no answer back.

The god that answers prayers on time, the church that never closes. This is money and the market. The only systems most of us were ever taught to fully trust. Snd the quiet collapse that happens when that system goes silent and there is no older faith underneath it to catch you.

Gripping tighter, reaching for a seat near the fire. This is the pull toward power and control as a substitute for safety. When nothing else around you has proven safe.

No one to call at three in the morning. This is the loneliness underneath all of it. Everyone you know is treading the same water. Too busy staying afloat to reach for each other.

The well that is poisoned, not dry. This is the heart of the whole piece. Trust between people is not gone forever. It has been contaminated by repeated harm. But contamination can be drawn out. It just takes someone willing to lower the bucket first, without asking what it’s worth.

The water that doesn’t betray the cup. This is the offer at the very end. Not certainty, or a guarantee nothing will go wrong again. But a willingness to risk being the first honest exchange in a long line of broken ones.

We have poisoned the meanings of our words. They have all gained a market value instead of a true meaning. It is hard to tell who is genuine, but we must start to reach out to each other and get past everything needing to be a transaction. Agape Love cannot be sold.

Blessed Be

Kristi, High Priestess Agape Covens

Founder of Crossroads Movement


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