A Love Letter To Our Daughter

A Love Letter To Our Daughter


ʻŌhiʻa Lehua Collection

For Kaʻanoʻilikolehua

Motherhood is a strange and holy thing. It is grief and joy braided together so tightly you cannot always tell where one ends and the other begins. It is laughter and worry. It is frustration over the small things and fear over the big ones. It is watching them fall and knowing you cannot always catch them. It is wanting to protect their childhood while knowing adulthood is already calling their name.

And then one day, you look at her and realize she is no longer a little girl you remember.

 She is becoming.

Becoming a woman.

Becoming herself.

Becoming someone who can walk through rain and still lift her face toward the light.

That is the ʻŌhiʻa Lehua.

It does not wait for perfect weather to bloom. It does not need easy ground. It grows where others might not. It reaches through rock, through mist, through storm, through silence. And when the rain comes, it does not disappear. It becomes more itself. Vibrant, alive, unmistakable. A bloom born not despite the elements, but because of them.

This collection was created for our eldest daughter, Kaʻanoʻilikolehua.

For the child she was.

For the woman she is becoming.

For the sister who loves joyfully.

For the daughter who teaches us strength.

For the girl who still carri curiosity in her hands while stepping into the weight and wonder of this world.

We are proud of her in ways language can hardly hold.

Proud not because she has endured, but because she has continued to bloom. Proud not because she is perfect, but because she is real.

She is rain and flower, root and petal, quiet and fire. 

And as her mother, I know there will be so much I cannot do for her.

I cannot walk every road.

I cannot soften every hurt.

I cannot choose every person who will love her, fail her, misunderstand her, or see her clearly.

But I can bear witness.

I can watch.

I can hope.

I can pray.

I can hold space for her when life feels heavy.

I can remind her that she does not have to become anything for anyone else. She only has to become more deeply, more honestly, more bravely herself.

Kaʻanoʻilikolehua, this is for you.

May you always know that your softness is not a weakness.

May you always trust the steadiness in your own feet.

May you never shrink your bloom to make others comfortable.

May you remember that even in the rain, and maybe because of it, you are always becoming something beautiful.