No ratings.
A cosmic metamorphosis of fractured beings seeking flight amidst crumbling foundations. |
We hover beneath clockwork celestial gears— half-born chrysalides, trembling in the crawl space between gravity’s grip and the grammar of flight. The pavement hums static hymns, each crack a map of where we almost bloomed. (Don’t look down: the earth is just a rumor here, a punchline the stars forgot to finish.) A thousand bottles shatter in slow arcs— glass becoming liquid constellations. We named this falling, but it’s really the sky learning to kneel. Somewhere, a wingless thing hums. Its body: a failed alchemy of dust and daylight. The air tastes of copper, of endings that forgot to end. But wait— feel the scaffold shiver: cells conspire in quiet riot, turning our static into second chances. One day, these knuckles will split into feathers. One day, the fall itself will catch us—not as bugs, but as buoys in the bloodstream of something that remembers our true names. Until then, we orbit the almost, jars of fireflies strapped to our ribs, palms pressed to the pulse of not-yet but-might-still-be. (Even cracks hold stardust. Even silence, pressed to light, becomes a psalm.) |