-my Early Life Ep Celavie — Group-
Our household pulsed to the rhythms of a dozen little rituals. Mornings meant the crackle of toast and the radio’s low hum — a serenade of market reports and anthems for people who still believed in long-term plans. Afternoons were for the market square: vendors with their calling voices, cats sunbathing on produce crates, and the music from a street musician whose accordion seemed to know everyone’s name. I learned early that the world announces itself in texture: the roughness of a baker’s hands, the sweetness of overripe figs, the sticky thumbprint left on a new book’s cover.
My early life was also a lesson in beginnings that never stayed the same. My mother would say, “We are always becoming,” as she stitched a hem or rearranged flowers on the sill. Movement was in the family’s bones: cousins arriving and leaving, jobs opening and closing like book covers, the slow migration of recipes as people moved between kitchens. Those comings and goings taught me to keep my hands open for new stories, and to treat farewells like chapters rather than final sentences. -my early life ep celavie group-
There was a group we lived inside of, even if it didn’t have a formal name: neighbors who swapped sugar and small favors, the baker who slipped us warm rolls, the grocer who kept a ledger with names and generous smudges. We called ourselves, jokingly, ep Célavie — an odd little mash of syllables that felt like a private radio frequency. It meant nothing specific, and that was its charm. We were a constellation of small things: an overflowing mailbox, a shared umbrella at market, a chorus of mismatched voices at neighborhood meals. Within that group, belonging wasn’t signed or declared. It was shown — through someone bringing soup on a rainy night, a bike carried up three flights of stairs for a neighbor, a chorus of greetings when a child returned home late. Our household pulsed to the rhythms of a