When the earth held its breath, and the trees stopped speaking in green, I found your shadow pressed into the silence— not like absence, but like the memory of warmth left in a chair after someone has risen.
I did not call your name. It was already there, inscribed beneath the skin of rain, folded into the hush of wheat fields bowing under the weight of their gold. Even the wind carried you— not as sound, but as the echo of longing before the voice has formed.
There were no angels. Only the dust rising from the soles of tired workers who knew love by its weight, not its wings. And still, the sun leaned low, willing to touch the dirt just to reach us.
You were the breath I took before understanding what it meant to be hollow and still full. You were the salt in my wound that sang.
Oh, what a terrible, beautiful thing— to be stitched into another’s silence. To be the ache someone calls home. To carry within you
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When the Earth Held Its Breath
When the earth held its breath, and the trees stopped speaking in green, I found your shadow pressed into the silence— not like absence, but like the memory of warmth left in a chair after someone has risen.
I did not call your name. It was already there, inscribed beneath the skin of rain, folded into the hush of wheat fields bowing under the weight of their gold. Even the wind carried you— not as sound, but as the echo of longing before the voice has formed.
There were no angels. Only the dust rising from the soles of tired workers who knew love by its weight, not its wings. And still, the sun leaned low, willing to touch the dirt just to reach us.
You were the breath I took before understanding what it meant to be hollow and still full. You were the salt in my wound that sang.
Oh, what a terrible, beautiful thing— to be stitched into another’s silence. To be the ache someone calls home. To carry within you the whole cathedral of their absence, lit by nothing but the soft, persistent flame of remembering.
And still— I would carry it. The ache, the salt, the tender ruins of your voice crumbling somewhere between my ribs.
I would carry it into the next life and the next, and the next— not because I must, but because even grief was more beautiful with you in it.
-- Jeffrey Freeman
A poem I just wrote as I sit here missing Noi Noi (my fiancee). She is so far away its hard, but I hope to see her soon.
Fields of weary travelers come and go My existence from faltering widows Bring all tortured screaming to my ears,
From the weakening of all social ties I weave myself thorough colors I do not know My only kin console me through the years,
There was a wish when I was young And I wonder how it went, Heavy blows to my soul Quell the artist onto sleep In which We cannot wake, I bow my head like fawn A young priest in Lent,