The sages of old—those who could see beyond the stars—say that before arriving in this world, our souls had already traced a path.
A silent agreement, a profound choice: the mother who will carry us in her womb, the family that will surround us, the exact place where we will begin this human experience.
The Souls We Choose: A Poetic Reflection on Friendship, Destiny, and the Bonds of the Heart
It is not by chance, they insist. It is destiny, woven from the need to grow, to learn, to heal the errors of other lives.
A kind of sacred contract with both light and shadow.
But that, in one way or another, we’ve already heard. We sense it, even if we don’t always remember.
What’s truly interesting happens after.
When we grow.
When we become aware of our own path, our soul’s senses expand—and begin to awaken.
Something inside us starts to seek not just company, but connection.
That is where a second kind of choice occurs: friendship.
Friendship is not an accident. It is an encounter—
or rather, a re-encounter.
There are people who appear in our lives as if they had been waiting for us. They need no explanation.
We look at them, and something within us settles.
A part of us—perhaps one we didn’t even know was incomplete—feels at peace.
And it’s not because we think alike, nor because we share similar stories,
but because there is a harmony that transcends the everyday.
A silent recognition between souls who already knew each other from before—from other times.
We choose our friends, yes—but they choose us too.
We meet at the precise point where our wounds and our light can coexist without judgment.
Our blood family is the one with whom we share genetics, roots, and traditions.
But our soul family, our true friends, are those we choose freely and consciously.
With them, there is no obligation—only decision.
No imposed expectations—only willing devotion.
True friends are there when life trembles, and also when it blooms.
They witness our defeats and celebrate our victories.
They hold us without trying to change us.
They love us through acceptance.
That is why true friendship is one of the purest forms of love.
Just as we choose where to be born in order to heal,
we also choose whom to love in friendship, in order to become whole.
In many ways, our friends are our true home.
Not all friendships last forever—
some arrive for only a season,
others accompany us until the end of the journey.
But each one fulfills its purpose.
Each friend leaves a mark, a lesson, a gift.
Because while we may come into this world with a divine plan,
there are choices we make in freedom.
And friendship is one of the most beautiful among them.










