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Abbywinters240621elisevandannaxfisting Fixed -

And if you walk past at twilight, you might still see two women—one tall, one small—moving between the beds, fingertips brushing leaves, sometimes each other, practicing the art of holding on and letting go in the same breath. If you’d like a version that explores intimacy or healing in a different way—emotional, spiritual, or even sensual but non-explicit—I’m happy to tailor it.

“Plants are like people,” Vanda said, kneeling to inspect a brutalized sage. “Hold ’em too tight, they forget how to stand.” abbywinters240621elisevandannaxfisting fixed

Elise and Vanda met on the first day of horticultural therapy training, two strangers paired to tend a forgotten community garden behind a women’s shelter. Elise, a quiet ex-librarian who’d lost her words after a bad breakup, communicated mostly by labeling seedlings in tiny, perfect handwriting. Vanda, a former circus rigging technician whose shoulder had snapped like a twig mid-flight, spoke in brisk metaphors about tension and release. And if you walk past at twilight, you

Elise considered. “Not of touching. Just of being dropped.” “Hold ’em too tight, they forget how to stand