
A New Beginning
As we begin each new year, it is a good time to resume goals that have been put on hold and begin again with a renewed sense of commitment and enthusiasm. There is no time like the present. We don’t have an unlimited amount of time to achieve the work that gives us a sense of purpose or meaning in our lives. Ignite that longing or passion in you that you’ve put off for so long whether it be for a cause, going back to school, volunteering to help animals or people that need your help, mentoring or teaching others a skill that they would like to have, or sharing your talents with others to not only enrich their lives but to enrich your life as well. It’s time to renew yourself or begin again. It’s the dawning of a new day. I now have a grandson that has brought much love and joy into my life when I needed it most. The first time, I heard him utter the words, “grandma, I love you,” it was like life was born anew in me and it was like a new beginning in my life.

The following poem is about this new beginning in my life with the birth of my grandson. Reliving many moments in my childhood through him and seeing the wonder in his eyes when he learns something new has been a journey both healing and rewarding.
Innocent One
Oh beautiful child,
little lamb of promise
with your sweet, sad eyes-
reflecting, lush pools of angel softness.
Your melancholy lights burn deep
into this soul
and sing silently to me;
as the gentle humming bird,
undauntedly, unquestioningly
alights in a barren, withered field…
and trustingly sows a tiny seed into the ground
from which new life may spring,
you absolve me of my unworthiness
and still even my skeptic cries.
A New Day Has Come –
Céline Dion
Insights About This Poem
“Innocent One” is a meditation on renewal born through intergenerational love. The poem frames the birth of a grandchild not simply as a joyful event, but as a quiet spiritual reckoning—one that reopens the speaker’s inner landscape and invites healing where doubt once lived. The child’s “sweet, sad eyes” suggest a depth beyond age, reflecting both vulnerability and ancient wisdom. In witnessing this innocence, the speaker confronts their own feelings of unworthiness and skepticism, which are gently dissolved by the child’s mere presence.
The hummingbird becomes a central symbol of faith and resilience. Its willingness to alight in a “barren, withered field” mirrors the poet’s emotional terrain—places marked by past wounds or exhaustion. Yet, like the bird sowing a seed, the child brings the promise of regeneration without judgment or expectation. This act is not dramatic; it is quiet, instinctual, and deeply trusting.
The poem reveals how new life can restore a sense of meaning that time and hardship may erode. Through the grandchild, the speaker relives childhood wonder while also finding absolution and hope. “Innocent One” ultimately affirms that love—pure, unguarded, and unearned—has the power to transform skepticism into grace and barrenness into possibility.
From the quiet noticing invited by The Ladybug Poem, a thread of awareness weaves its way through A New Day Has Come and the tender offering found in The Gift of Love, where love and hope unfold in simple moments. That thread continues through Inspiring Poems About Daughters and the enduring guidance reflected in Mothers Guide Us Throughout Life, each honoring connection, care, and presence across generations. Together, these reflections lead naturally to The Magic of Being and A Ladybug of Culture, where small moments and gentle observations are gathered into deeper meditations on awareness, perspective, and the meaning we find in simply noticing life as it unfolds.



