Welcome to Bee Sides
short reflections on justice, hope, and the human spirit
This series is a corner of our blog where I gather books, stories, and unexpected moments that linger long after the first glance.
Most will tie back to incarceration, justice, and the quiet fight for dignity. But sometimes? Itāll simply be whatever refuses to let go. The echoes that stay with me. Because thatās what Bee Sides are for.
Let me know what youāre reading, watching, or wondering about. Maybe itāll make the next issue.
This oneās about the secret life of names, how they shape us, and how they land.
Part I was the story of how bees became our symbol of shared labor, mutual care, and volunteer culture. Part II is the more personal side.
The bees didnāt just show up in our mission.
They showed up in old traditions, strange timing, andĀ tiny messengers with wings.
‘Lily Melissa Owens, your jar is open.ā
The quote is a whisper of a moment in the book The Secret Life of Bees, and unexplained beyond the metaphor of an open door and the chance to walk through it. But I knew what else it meant.
Bees and honey run through the history of people I love.
When my son was just starting to talk, he couldnāt pronounce his sister’s name, Kayla, so he called her what he heard the grownups call her: Honey.
Heād run to her at full speed after she got out of school, weaving through all the other kids, squealing with joy, āHoney!” The other moms were delighted.
There was a little girl in the neighborhood named Michaela.Ā
He called her Ma-Honey.
And then thereās Van Morrison. You see this one coming, right? My daughter and I love Tupelo Honey, which isĀ layered into our story. ‘Just like honey, baby, from the bee.’
And my mom? My mom’s initials are B.B. Her husband, who adored her, simply called her āB.ā
When I sold my home in 2012 to start a new life, my daughter gave me a signed copy of The Secret Life of Bees for Christmas. It was a time when I needed to believe that the jar was opening for me, too. Six months later came the catalyst for everything that would eventually become Adopt an Inmate.Ā
Itās funny how life keeps echoing itself. Sometimes weāre not choosing the symbols, weāre just listening. It can even be a color, a taste, a scent. Or a name.
I met my oldest and dearest friend on the first day of sixth grade in the fall of 1975. She has a gift that has always fascinated me. She feels names.
We live in different states now, but I know the full names of her friends because that’s how she refers to them. It’s an act of respect. Sheās the only one who knows the full parade of names Iāve worn over the years. In order. Legal, chosen, abandoned. The outward signs of all my attempts to choose who I was, or to borrow who I thought I was supposed to be.
Her name stayed the same while I spun and flitted around. She never judged. Just watched me circle, waiting for me to land.
Once, I saw her guess a strangerās name.
She was visiting me, and I took her to the charming downtown in my little city. We had just left a bookstore and crossed the street so I could take her to a groovy local spot. A cigar bar with jazz music, pool tables, and spirits. At the counter we ordered ruby port, and (I swear I am not making this up) Havana Honey cigars.
She mentioned to the owner that sheād just picked up a poetry book by Bukowski. He shrugged and said he wasnāt much for poetry.
Well that didnāt sit well with her. She always knew who she was, a writer, musician, an actor. Art, in all its forms, is sacred to her. She couldnāt let it stand that someone would intentionally shut out that kind of beauty from their life.
āIf I can guess your name,ā she said, āyouāll read one poem from this book.ā
And because she always makes room for others, she invited me in:
āYou go first,ā she said. āTake a guess.ā
I donāt remember what I said.
It wasnāt his name.
Then it was her turn. She went quiet. Studied him.
His energy. His posture. His face as he looked back at her.
After maybe fifteen seconds, she said:
āDavid.ā
She said it with such confidence, I knew she was right. He turned to his staff and demanded to know who told her.
But no one had.
It wasnāt some parlor trick. It was reverence.
Years after that, we met in New York, and visited the 9/11 memorial. The one with all the names. She had to sit down. “It’s the names,” she said through tears, feeling the weight of them.
If youāre wondering what her name is, itās Sarah.
Her name means princess, but sheās not the tiara-wearing type.
Sheās royalty of a different kind.
The kind that can command the stage, summon a name, and still remember your dogās birthday.
One of my former last names began with a B, which is why, years ago, I started using “Bee” as my last name online. It was a way to keep myself both hidden and seen.
Just a few months ago, after some significant personal turmoil, I stopped circling, and landed, legally changing my name for the last time. To what it always real-ly was. Melissa Bee.
One last breadcrumb:
Itās never explained.
Not in the book. Not in the movie.
But Iāll tell you something Sue Monk Kidd never does:
Lily’sĀ middle name, Melissa, means “honeybee.”
So yes, this little ābee thingā is personal.Ā
Messages from the universe are a lot like dreams.
They donāt need to make sense to anyone but you.
Someone else may come away with something completely different.
Thatās the beauty of it.
So now Iām curious …
Has a book, a name, or a line ever cracked something open for you?
Have you ever stumbled across a message that felt⦠meant?
š£ļø Tell me your story. What was your jar is open moment?
š Missed Part I? Read Bee Speak: The History of Communal Labor
šĀ Get InvolvedĀ ā Help behind the scenes
āļøĀ Take the QuizĀ ā How much do you know about U.S. prisons?
⤠Give ā Fuel the mission






0 Comments