Stories From The Hollow Tree
đ§” The Button That Came Back Warm A Hollow Tree myth for the ones who notice when small things move. Have you ever lost something small⊠and felt like it mattered more than it should? Welcome to The Hollow Tree Where strange stories nest and grow⊠âŠand sometimes, the smallest thingsshift just enough to be found again. Letâs begin. đ§” The Button That Came Back Warm A Hollow Tree myth for the ones who notice when small things move. There are creatures who do not live in trees. Not in roots.Not in branches. They live in smaller places. In hems.In pockets.In the quiet corners of things that are almost held together. They are called the Buttonkin. No one sees them directly. Not because they hideâ but because they are very, very goodat arriving in the momentsomething loosens. The Buttonkin do not take things. Not really. They only gather what has already begun to slip. A thread that has come undone.A button hanging by one quiet loop.A small thing that no longer knowsif it is meant to stay. And when they find such a thing⊠they carry it. Not far. Just far enough. One early spring morning,when the ground was soft but the air still held a little winter,a child named Mara found a button in her pocket. She didnât remember putting it there. It was smooth.Round.A little worn at the edges. She turned it over in her fingers. It felt⊠warm. Not from her hand. It had been warm before she touched it. âThatâs strange,â she said softly. Mara checked her coat. All the buttons were there. She checked her sleeves. Still fastened. She checked her bag. Nothing missing. And yetâ the button remained. She carried it with her that day. Through the quiet places.Through the in-between hours.Through the small moments that didnât ask to be noticed. Every now and then, she would reach into her pocketjust to feel it again. Still warm. Still there. By afternoon, she began to notice something else. Small things seemed⊠different. A loose thread on her sleevethat she could have sworn had been there for daysâ was gone. A place in her pocket that always felt slightly tornâ felt smooth. Even the way her coat sat on her shouldersfelt⊠settled. Not tighter. Not newer. Just⊠right. Mara stopped walking. She reached into her pocket again. The button rested in her palm,quiet and steady. And for just a momentâ she had the strangest feeling. Not that she had found something. But that something had beenreturned to her differently. Not taken. Not replaced. Just⊠shifted. As if whatever had been loosehad been noticed. And gently⊠tended. Mara looked down at the button. âWhere did you come from?â she asked. The wind moved slightly at her back. Not an answer. But not nothing, either. She slipped the button back into her pocket. That night, she placed it on her windowsill. The moonlight touched it. And for just a secondâ only a secondâ it seemed to catch the lightin a way that didnât quite belong to this world. Then it was just a button again. Morning came. The button was still there. Cool now. Ordinary. But Mara noticed something as she picked it up. Even without the warmth⊠it still felt like it belonged to her. Not because it had before. But because it had beengiven back. Somewhere, in the quiet seams of the world,the Buttonkin moved along their careful paths. Gathering what loosened.Returning what mattered.Leaving things just a little more wholethan they had found them. And if you ever lose something smallâ something that didnât seem importantuntil it was goneâ and then find it againwhere you werenât looking⊠you might pause. Just for a moment. And wonderif it had been somewhereit needed to be. before finding its wayback to you. If something small goes missing⊠donât rush to replace it. Sometimes,itâs just being carriedfor a little while. To the listeners.To the whisper-hearers.To the ones who hold story before it has shape: We see you.We thank you.We will keep writing. Thank you for listening to The Hollow Tree. This is just the beginning,and you are always welcome to returnâwhenever youâre ready for another story. You can find more tales and behind-the-scenes magic at thehollowtree.substack.com, Instagram @TheHollowTreeStories, and remember to follow along on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and soon YouTube. Until next timeâmay the path be soft,and the whisper of the forest stay with you. đđŻïž âWritten and performed by Amber Jensen and the voices of The Hollow Tree If this story stirred something in youâŠYou can keep The Hollow Tree lit by subscribing, sharing it with someone who listens like you do, or leaving a kind note. Everything here is offered with care.And every listen, every share, every whisper down the lineâit matters. đČ This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thehollowtree.substack.com [https://thehollowtree.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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