Finding Peace in Presence: What Sara Teasdale’s “Enough” Teaches Us About Modern Love
In a world obsessed with defining, tracking, and securing everything, have we forgotten how to simply let love breathe?
Enough
Sara Teasdale
It is enough for me by day
To walk the same bright earth with him;
Enough that over us by night
The same great roof of stars is dim.
I have no care to bind the wind
Or set a fetter on the sea—
It is enough to feel his love
Blow by like music over me.
Reflection
Sara Teasdale’s “Enough” is a masterclass in emotional minimalism. Written in an era before digital connectivity, its core message feels incredibly urgent today. Teasdale captures a love that demands nothing but existence—sharing the same earth by day, sitting under the same dim canopy of stars by night.
In contemporary society, we are conditioned to possess and control. We track locations, demand instant responses, and overanalyze relationships through a lens of hyper-security. Teasdale counters this modern anxiety with profound surrender. By comparing love to the wind and the sea, she reminds us that some of the most beautiful forces in life cannot—and should not—be bound or fettered.
To “feel his love / Blow by like music over me” is an invitation to practice presence over possession. The poem argues that love’s true power doesn’t come from legalistic certainty or constant digital validation, but from the simple, quiet awareness of connection. In a frantic world, Teasdale offers a blueprint for peace: letting go of the need to control the narrative and, instead, finding absolute contentment in the simple reality of a shared life.
As you read this poem, ask yourself:
In your own life, are you holding onto love with an open palm like the music in the wind, or are you trying to build a cage around it?