November 1, 2025
There’s something quietly comforting about staring up at a night sky and wondering if someone you love is looking back. Today’s Thought of the Day and Question of the Day explore that thin veil between memory and meaning, the space where loss, love, and legacy overlap. Whether you believe in signs from beyond or think it’s all just the echoes of our own hearts, tonight’s reflection is for you.
Thought of the Day
“Perhaps they are not stars, but openings in heaven where the love of our lost ones pours through.” — Eskimo Proverb
There’s poetry in that idea, that the light we see is love finding its way back to us. I’ve always liked the thought that when the world goes quiet and the sky fills with pinpricks of light, it’s not just astronomy, it’s affection.
We’re wired to look for meaning in patterns. The same brain that can see faces in clouds or messages in coffee grounds can also see a twinkle in the sky and think of someone who’s gone. That’s not foolishness; it’s connection. It’s how we keep the people we’ve lost close, even when they’ve long since drifted out of reach.
When my grandfather passed away, I remember walking outside one night and spotting a particularly bright star low on the horizon. It wasn’t a miracle. It was probably Venus. But in that moment, it didn’t matter. What mattered was that I needed it to be him.
Maybe that’s all belief really is, the willingness to give the universe a chance to talk back.
If you’ve ever felt a “sign”, a song on the radio at just the right time, a butterfly that lingered a little too long, you know what I mean. Science doesn’t have to explain everything. Some things just belong to the heart.
And if you like this post, you might like“There Is More Hunger for Love Than for Bread”, a reminder that sometimes what we need most can’t be seen, only felt.

Question of the Day
Do you believe our loved ones can still influence our lives from beyond, or do we just carry their lessons forward ourselves?
Maybe it’s both.
Sometimes I think of it like gravity, an unseen force still pulling on us even after the source has drifted away. The people who shaped us don’t stop influencing us just because they’ve stopped existing in the same form. Their fingerprints are all over who we are: in the phrases we use, the foods we crave, the choices we make when no one’s watching.
I still hear my grandmother’s voice every time I add too much salt. (“Kenny, taste it before you season it!”) She’s been gone for years, but somehow, she’s right there, annoyed but affectionate, keeping me honest.
Maybe that’s not the supernatural. Maybe that’s just the natural doing its quiet, beautiful work.
There’s also comfort in the other idea, that love doesn’t just fade into memory but transforms into something that still touches our lives. Whether that’s divine, spiritual, or purely emotional, who’s to say? Sometimes it feels less important how it works and more important that it does.
Because when we remember someone, when we tell their stories, or when we do something kind because they once taught us to, that’s them, living again for a moment. That’s their influence reaching across the divide, whispering, “You’re doing okay.”
Final Thought
Maybe heaven isn’t somewhere “up there” at all. Maybe it’s what happens when we keep letting love shine through us.
So the next time you look up and see the stars, don’t just make a wish. Make a connection. Someone, somewhere, real or remembered, might just be shining back.
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