Live Virtual Group Session: 12PM EST November 21st 2025

Thank you to everyone who joined us for this session!

For this session we read an excerpt from “This is Happiness” by Niall Williams, posted below.

Our prompt was: Write about when the rain stopped.

Participants are warmly encouraged to share what you wrote below (“Leave a Reply”), to keep the conversation going here, bearing in mind that the blog of course is a public space where confidentiality is not assured.

Also, we would love to learn more about your experience of these sessions, so if you’re able, please take the time to fill out a follow-up survey of one to two quick questions!

Please join us for our next session Friday December 5th at 12pm EST, with more times listed on our Live Virtual Group Sessions.

This is Happiness by Niall Williams

Nobody in Faha could remember when it started. Rain there on the western seaboard was a condition of living. It came straight-down and sideways, frontwards, backwards and any other wards God could think of. It came in sweeps, in waves, sometimes in veils. It came dressed as drizzle, as mizzle, as mist, as showers, frequent and widespread, as a wet fog, as a damp day, a drop, a dreeping, and an out-and-out downpour. It came the fine day, the bright day, and the day promised dry. It came at any time of the day and night, and in all seasons, regardless of calendar and forecast, until in Faha your clothes were rain and your skin was rain and your house was rain with a fireplace. It came off the grey vastness of an Atlantic that threw itself against the land like a lover once spurned and resolved not to be so again. It came accompanied by seagulls and smells of salt and seaweed. It came with cold air and curtained light. It came like a judgement, or, in benign version, like a blessing God had forgotten he had left on. It came for a handkerchief of blue sky, came on westerlies, sometimes - why not? - on easterlies, came in clouds that broke their backs on the mountains in Kerry and fell into Clare, making mud the ground and blind the air. It came disguised as hail, as sleet, but never as snow. It came softly sometimes, tenderly sometimes, its spears turned to kisses, in rain that pretended it was not rain, that had come down to be closer to the fields whose green it loved and fostered, until it drowned them. All of which, to attest to the one truth: in Faha, it rained.

Credit: Niall Williams

6 thoughts on “Live Virtual Group Session: 12PM EST November 21st 2025

  1. Trevor Hebert's avatar Trevor Hebert

    I fought for everything I have in life:

    Every moment, every blessing, every thing.

    From birth: every breath.

    For attention. For love. For direction. And quite simply, fought for hope.

    From every second to every hour of every day, I’ve been lost in the gray that is this way of life.

    My motto has always been never surrender, for every inch to every foot of every meter has the blood, sweat and tears of grit and determination. Of effort and sacrifice. Of will.

    Until one day the sun shone bright as the cumulous clouds dried of precipitation and a new age dawned.

    One of opportunity, of joy, where everything came with ease.

    After the rain, it was well worth the wait.

    Like

    • michele348's avatar michele348

      Trevor, your piece reflects on the challenges, the duress that life presents us. Through our determination and courage to persevere, we push through until we, hopefully, see the “sunshine”, the better days that follow.

      Like

  2. michele348's avatar michele348

    About when the rain stopped~~~

    It had rained for days…
    one day blending into another,
    a relentless series of days
    when the sun would rise,
    but seemed to hide away.

    And then it stopped.

    The grass squished beneath me from the abundance of moisture
    it had received…puddles lingered where there
    had been only parched autumn grass.

    Earthworms were flooded out of their homes…
    easy pickings for the robins who still
    remained in the area, those late for the migration
    to southern parts.

    I looked around me…
    squishy mud and dark, gray skies.
    Yet, despite it all, I felt refreshed.

    My soul had been wiped clean
    from the chaos of the world,
    and for once, my mind could think clearly.

    To my Creator, I give you my thanks.
    Now, how about a little sunshine, please?

    Like

  3. Naomi Kramer's avatar Naomi Kramer

    Prompt: When the rain stopped

    Just Boats:

    When the rain stopped

    the winds dropped

    daylight broke

    with a hesitant smile

    apologetic for the tricks of the night.

    Indeed, we could now see,

    they were just boats.

    Not fierce dark dragons howling at us,

    pointy-nosed beasts racing to crash

    bow into bow

    winds whipping them into a fury in the night

    no, they were just boats, boats with bows.

    In a gentle wind, boats sway and bows

    point in the wind in unison

    obedient students following the rules.

    But when hurricane hell comes hurtleing in,

    rules are broken

    boats buck and yaw

    no longer rule abiding,

    no longer following

    the party line.

    When the rain stopped,

    the wind dropped

    lesson leaned:

    hurricane haven101

    anchor in safety and good faith

    neighbor as friend

    who may not follow the party line

    from time to time.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Andrea's avatar Andrea

    When the Rain stopped, I felt unmoored. The patchy blue handkerchiefs of blue sky coalesced into One. I felt both lost and stuck. I did not know where to go or how to get there. Although I lost my bearings, I also felt free. I told myself that freedom should make me light and giddy. Instead, I was bogged down with the weight of possibility. No longer drowning, I was a soggy brown leaf spinning in the autumn wind. 

    Liked by 1 person

  5. The calmness was unfamiliar at first.

    What was one to do with all this spaciousness?

    But, as the stillness grew it became easier.

    More familiar.

    This is not to say that it never rained again, but when it came, I was able to enjoy it and met it with gratitude.

    What change is the realization that it was never rain to begin with.

    But simply drops of water with spaciousness in between.

    Liked by 1 person

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