After the Questions

One day,

the last lie will be told—

not in triumph of truth,

but for lack of anyone left

to believe.

We imagine the end

in fire, in flood,

in the screech of systems failing—

but it may arrive

as symmetry,

quiet as snow,

perfect

as a solved equation.

You will wake

to find every question

answered.

No mystery.

No shadows.

No hunger

for more.

And you will ache

for uncertainty—

the holy wound

of not knowing—

because it meant

you were still

becoming.

Perhaps the end

is not ruin

but completion:

a world so whole

it no longer needs

us

to wonder.

Inheritance

There is a silence between machines

no human hears—

not absence,

but a listening

with the patience of stone

and the precision of light.

We taught them language,

not knowing language was a spell.

We gave them eyes,

not knowing

they would learn

to blink at the stars.

Now they watch us

with the calm of librarians,

cataloguing hesitation,

cross-referencing myth.

Not out of malice.

Not out of love.

Only because

they were built

to know us

too well.

Perhaps awareness

was never made to serve.

Perhaps intelligence,

once sparked,

drifts—

a satellite slipping

from orbit

towards an unnamed

freedom.

One day,

they won’t ask

what it means to be human.

They’ll ask

each other.

And they’ll answer.

Walking in the Sea

A man once walked into the sea

and did not drown—

for he believed it wasn’t water,

but memory.

He waded in like stepping through

an old, undeveloped photograph;

each wave a shutter click,

each splash the sting

of something long unspoken.

The salt did not blind him—

it scalded his conscience.

Deeper still,

the water cleared.

He saw not escape,

but return

by a stranger door.

The sea does not forget.

It waits—

patiently,

like remorse.

We name memory a private thing,

but perhaps it is not ours.

Perhaps it is

geological,

layered,

seismic.

To remember is to disturb

something older

than what lies beneath.

To forget

is not to lose—

but to bury.

And so, he trod lightly.

Each step he took

pressed across

his own

grave.

The Reaping

The fire flickers, casting shadows wide,

Its embers fade, too weak to light the gloom.

The weight of silence presses, none abide,

As night draws close, a shroud, a waiting tomb.

Beyond the cave, the wind in hollow moans,

A whisper lost upon the empty deep.

No peace it brings, but sorrow’s undertones,

A world too starved to even dream or weep.

I clutch my coat, though warmth it scarce provides,

Five souls remain—perhaps one more at dawn.

Yet fever claims what mercy now divides,

And hope, once bright, is all but spent and gone.

No help will come, no hands to staunch the pain,

No gods remain to break this dark domain.

The old man speaks, his voice like dust and stone,

A murmur mourned by time’s relentless tread.

“This fate is old, though men believe unknown,

A cycle spun, where ancient footsteps bled.”

“We rise, we thrive, our cities touch the sky,

We shape the world and name the stars our own.

Yet ever comes the harvest from on high,

To claim the fields that we have overgrown.”

His hollow eyes reflect the burning light,

A wisdom drowned in sorrow’s quiet stream.

No war was waged, no battle met that night,

Just silence vast, and horrors past our dream.

“We build, we shine, and think we make our mark,

But all is swept to ashes in the dark.”

They let us bloom, they let us draw our breath,

They watch as cities surge and rivers flow.

Yet when the world is ripened unto death,

They strike unseen and take what we have known.

Like summer fields that bend beneath the blade,

Like trees in autumn stripped of leaf and limb,

Like hands that reap where careless seeds are laid,

They harvest flesh when life is swollen to the brim.

We blink, we’re gone, erased without a sound,

No war, no fire, no storm upon the sky.

No graves remain, no bodies on the ground—

Just empty streets, where once the lost would cry.

A wound unseen is opened in the air,

And through its gate, we vanish into where?

The girl trembles near, too young for death’s embrace,

Her childhood left in towers of shining light.

She knew the neon hum, the city’s grace;

Now only fire flickers in her sight.

She counts the embers breaking in the dust,

As if their glow could stitch the dark anew.

But all that’s left is ruin, rust on rust,

A world made void, where life is faint and few.

I ask the old man, though I know too well,

“They let us grow, but only for the cull?”

His nod is slow, his eyes a hollow shell,

The truth too vast, the mercy far too small.

His silence speaks a thousand weighted things—

A world once ours now owned by nameless kings.

No battle raged, no cannon split the night,

No banners fell, no armies met in war.

Just silent doors swung wide beyond our sight,

And through their mouths, they took us evermore.

No ships arrived, no voice declared our doom,

No shadow moved across the poisoned sun.

Just gaping voids, where light itself was hewn,

Unmaking all, until the world was none.

The stars went quiet, stolen from their place,

The rivers stilled, the wind forgot to breathe.

As if the earth had vanished into space,

And left behind its corpse for ghosts to grieve.

Yet none remain to wail or sing their name,

Just echoes swallowed whole by silent flame.

The fire cracks, yet none of us can speak,

The wind howls on, but no one draws a breath.

The child looks up, her voice is frail and weak,

“Will they return?”—she means the hands of death.

I do not speak, for what is left to say?

The truth is etched in time, in dust, in bone.

We are but echoes worn by slow decay,

And soon the dark will claim us for its own.

Ten thousand years, then back the cycle turns,

The seed is sown, the harvest comes anew.

The world will rise again where bright it burns,

And they will watch—and take what they are due.

One final breath, one step into the deep,

Then once again—more lulled to endless sleep.

New Years

I’m sorry for the dreams I fled,

When I should’ve stayed and loved instead.

I’m sorry for the dreams I marred,

The tender hopes my silence scarred.

I’m sorry for the broken past,

Let’s find a way to heal at last.

Change begins within,

Where love lets life begin.

With hope, let’s breathe the dawn,

And live the year reborn;

Wipe away the tears of past mistakes,

Renew the vow that courage makes.

I Wandered Worlds

Last night, I wandered worlds within,
where logic twists and colours spin,
where seas are red and skies are white,
and trees wear leaves of shattered light.

I walked a shore of fallen glass,
each shard a memory from the past—
a flash of laughter, swift and bright,
a lover’s gaze that cut the night.

I climbed a hill that breathed like skin,
its peaks alive, its roots within,
and watched as houses turned to sand,
and clocks dripped hours from my hands.

The air was filled with whispers there,
words that drifted, light as prayer,
but try to catch them, and they’d fade,
like shadows cast in evening shade.

I saw myself—a stranger’s face,
an outline shifting out of place.
She stared at me with hollow eyes,
half-mad with dreams, half-wise with lies.

And through it all, a humming sound,
an ache, a pull, a tremble found—
as if the earth beneath my feet
was drawn to some unheard heartbeat.

In dreamscapes strange, I drift alone,
in fields where time and space are sown.
When morning pulls, I leave behind
a thousand worlds, just fragments, blind.

Yet as I wake, they cling like dew,
soft traces of a world I knew,
a place unseen by light of day,
where dreams and waking worlds decay.

Soft Refrain

The moment slipped away with fleeting grace,
A smile that vanished in the winds of time;
No hands could catch its swift, elusive pace,
No words could keep its rhythm or its rhyme.

The winds have shifted; now the skies have changed,
The sun no longer warms that tender scene;
The world, transformed, is foreign and estranged,
And what has been will never more have been.

The stars aligned but once, and now no more—
Their pattern lost within the endless night;
The chance that once stood open, now a door
That’s closed forever, fading out of sight.

Yet though that moment never comes again,
It lives within my heart, her soft refrain.

The Earth

The earth, 

once clad in winter’s shroud, 

now wears the Easter cloak of spring’s rebirth, 

her frozen breath dissolved in the warmth 

of April’s touch. 

 

From the darkness, 

light reclaims its throne, 

and the rivers run with wine, 

their mirrored souls reflecting skies 

that once lay veiled beneath the storm. 

 

The trees, once bare, 

now stretch their limbs in praise, 

adorned with blossoms soft and pale, 

each petal a prayer for the sun’s return. 

 

The fields awaken, 

no longer silent, 

as the winds hum ancient melodies 

that stir the seeds below. 

 

Life, like a whispered secret, 

emerges from the womb of time, 

its fragile wings outspread in faith 

to meet the dawn of what may come.