Fresh today · Thursday, 4 June

New Wishes

A handful of wishes pulled from the cabinet this morning. Pick one up — copy, save it to your pinboard, or send it on.

Drawn at dawn
Wishes in the library
92,976

Sending you a wish — that you feel as beautiful as you look in the photo I'm staring at right now.

May the words you don't say today still be heard by the right people. I'm one of them. I'm listening.

Wishing you a moment of unprompted joy, just enough to recalibrate the whole day.

You are romance done patiently, and patiently is the only way it ever actually works. Loving you today.

May every door you walk through today open as though it had been hoping for you.

Sending you the kind of love that doesn't show off — it just shows up, on time, with your coffee right.

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What are we writing today?

Cabinets sorted by occasion. Open one — pages are arranged by warmth, not algorithm.

More from today

Wishing you a day that loves you back specifically. Generic blessings are beneath you.

You are my soft place, my sharp wit, my quiet certainty. Sending devotion in the dialect we share.

May your inbox be kind, your phone battery generous, and your evening end with my voice in your ear.

Sending you a wish I've been keeping warm — that you stay exactly this loved for as long as I'm here.

Wishing you a day where time politely waits for you and never the other way around.

You are the most romantic ongoing argument I've ever lost. Sending kisses and continued surrender.

May today be soft in the right places and bright in the others. I'll handle the music.

Sending love to the girlfriend who makes 'forever' sound less like a sentence and more like a promise.

A thank-you for retirement wishes doesn't need flourish — just honesty about how the kind words landed when you needed them most.

Start with the warmth you felt opening each card, and let the gratitude write itself from there onward.

Saying thanks after retirement is less about etiquette and more about giving your goodbye one last meaningful echo.

Keep it short, keep it specific — mention the moment a coworker's note made you pause and reread.

Handwritten replies still carry weight, especially when the sender remembered a project you'd nearly forgotten yourself.

Mention the celebration, the gift, the unexpected story — particulars turn polite acknowledgment into something genuinely felt.

Thank them for the wishes, then thank them for the years that earned those wishes in the first place.

A reply that names what they meant to your workdays will outlast any framed plaque on a shelf.

Don't dodge the sentiment — admit the cards moved you, and watch how that admission moves them back.

Open with their name, close with yours, and trust the middle to carry whatever feeling needs saying.

Group emails are fine for logistics, but heartfelt thanks deserve the slower medium of pen on paper.