Theme: Love Beyond Words — Dignity, Boundaries, Belonging
Quote for the Month: “Consent is love’s first language.” – Unknown
When Love Is Not Close — But Still Real
Love is often imagined as proximity:
being near, being present, being able to see, hear, or touch.
But for many people — including DeafBlind people — love is not built through closeness alone.
It is built through intention, communication, consent, and support, often across distance.
Distance may be physical.
It may be sensory.
It may be emotional, digital, or structural.
And yet, love does not disappear because space exists.
It simply requires more clarity.
A Quiet Lesson from Oshun
In African cosmology, Oshun is the Orisha of love, dignity, fertility, and relationship.
When the other Orishas began shaping the world, they did so without her.
They worked hard. They planned loudly. They pushed forward.
Oshun did not interrupt.
She did not force her inclusion.
She waited — knowing that silence is not refusal, and delay is not absence.
Only when creation began to fail did the others realise what was missing.
Oshun returned not with anger, but with truth:
Life cannot thrive where dignity is ignored.
Love cannot exist where consent is absent.
This is where love beyond distance begins — not in force, but in invitation.
Consent: Love Must Be Chosen — Repeatedly
Consent is not a single moment.
It is ongoing, responsive, and contextual.
There are many forms of consent:
verbal consent
non-verbal consent
written or tactile consent
situational consent
withdrawn consent
Silence is not consent.
Access is not consent.
Support is not ownership.
For DeafBlind people especially, consent must be clear and respected, because assumptions cause harm.
Healthy love:
asks before acting
checks in rather than assumes
allows consent to change
Love that crosses distance survives only when consent is explicit.
Communication: Meaning Travels Slower Than Messages
Communication is not the same as information.
Messages can travel instantly.
Understanding does not.
Distance — whether sensory, digital, or physical — introduces delays, misinterpretations, and gaps.
Healthy love accounts for this.
DeafBlind communication may involve:
tactile signing
assistive technology
intermediaries
structured check-ins
agreed communication rhythms
Healthy love does not punish delayed responses.
It does not demand constant availability.
It recognises that different bodies communicate differently.
Love beyond distance listens carefully — not just quickly.
Autonomy: Each Person Owns Their Yes and Their No
Autonomy means self-governance.
It means:
knowing your capacity
understanding your needs
recognising your limits
having the right to decide
Autonomy is not isolation.
It is the foundation that makes relationship possible.
For DeafBlind people, autonomy is often challenged by systems that:
decide without consultation
confuse support with control
assume dependency
Healthy love protects autonomy.
It does not override it “for convenience.”
It does not replace consent with good intentions.
Love that respects autonomy survives distance — because it trusts the other person’s inner authority.
Support: What Makes Love Possible
Love does not exist in a vacuum.
Support may include:
communication tools
accessible technology
trusted intermediaries
clear routines and agreements
community accountability
Support is not weakness.
It is infrastructure.
Without support, distance becomes abandonment.
With support, distance becomes manageable.
Healthy love understands that support enables dignity, and dignity enables connection.
Love Across Distance: What It Requires
Love beyond distance asks more of us — not less.
It requires:
patience instead of urgency
clarity instead of assumption
boundaries instead of intrusion
respect instead of entitlement
It teaches us that love is not proven by access, but by care.
Quiet Rebuilding Through Healthy Love
Learning to love across distance is part of quiet rebuilding.
It looks like:
redefining boundaries
slowing communication to preserve clarity
honouring nervous systems
choosing dignity over performance
allowing relationships to mature rather than rush
This rebuilding is subtle.
It often goes unseen.
But it is foundational.
Take the Vision. Rebuild It. Live It.
Love beyond distance is not lesser love.
It is intentional love.
It is love that listens.
Love that asks.
Love that waits when needed.
Love that honours autonomy and builds support.
When consent is respected, communication is intentional, autonomy is protected, and support is present — love does not disappear across distance.
It deepens.
This is love beyond words.
This is love with dignity.
This is love that lasts.