I’ve always believed the universe speaks — not with words, but with whispers hidden in everything.
It tells stories through the wind that hums between leaves, the dust that dances in sunlight, the laughter that fades into quiet nights. It paints mysteries in the color of roses and writes poetry in the rhythm of water.
Every sound, every breath, every shimmer of light is a verse from a story older than any scripture.
And maybe that’s why I was born to write — not for fame, not even for readers, but to listen and translate what the world keeps trying to say.
For years I thought I was just wandering: joining clubs, studying languages, climbing mountains, walking alone on Malioboro Street. I thought I was lost. But I wasn’t. I was gathering stories. I was learning how to see beauty, how to understand silence, how to feel life beyond what can be measured.
And now I realize — nothing I did was useless. Every random choice, every strange detour, every “useless” hobby — they all formed a pattern.
The call wasn’t loud. It didn’t come from the sky.
It came softly, through my curiosity, my loneliness, and my hunger to understand meaning.
The world doesn’t need more noise; it needs more storytellers who remember how to listen.
Religion, to me, is one of those languages the universe uses.
But I’ve learned that faith and truth can’t be owned by one voice or one name. Some people study religion to build walls; I study it to open windows. I don’t need to be right — I just need to be real.
Because every soul is born with its own map toward the Divine. Some call Him God, some call Her Nature, some just feel It in the quiet of the night.
And that’s fine. The problem isn’t in what we believe — it’s in thinking we’re better than others for believing it.
This world doesn’t belong only to humans. It belongs to every creature that breathes, crawls, or blooms. Even dust, even death, plays its part in the balance.
We are guests here, not owners. Yet, the most greedy guest of all is us — humans who act as if they’ll never leave.
But still, I believe this:
Every creature has its food. Every heart has its path.
If God can feed the smallest invisible life, then surely He won’t forget the soul that keeps walking, searching, and creating.
And maybe, that’s all I am —
A storyteller who finally heard the whisper:
“Welcome home.”
11/19/2025 11:38:00 AM
Eksi Romiasih

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