Tags
Complicated Peace, Deferred Catastrophe, Ecological Lament, Embodied Memory, Existential Disquiet, Grief And Survival, Inland Selfhood, Interior Exile, Love And Aftermath, Melancholic Realism, Mourning And Endurance, Nature As Witness, Post-Trauma Landscape, Psychic Topography, Ritual Of Letting Go, Riverine Instruction, Rural Retreat, Sea As Grief, Seasonal Threshold, Survival Misnamed Peace
I fled inland when the sea grew cruel,
when waves repeated a name I couldn’t hear.
I sought the ordinary, played the fool—
the trees, the river, and the fallow year.
The cabin swallowed me without a word.
I knelt to know each lichen, every fern.
I walked until the name no longer stirred,
as though the quiet were a thing to learn.
My life inside me like a sealed-off room,
the furniture still holding imprints of use.
I thought the woods could be my living tomb,
a resting place among the roots, a truce.
The river showed me what to do with loss:
stay low and patient, let the banks decide.
I watched its waters smooth rocks, erase moss.
I turned to stone—even stone can’t halt the tide.
But night undid what daylight tried to build.
I’d wake to tides that had no business here—
the walls alive with light the sea had spilled,
your voice still caught inside my inner ear.
I thought I’d left you scattered in the wind,
in harbor fog, on the desolate shore.
But flesh remembers what I can’t rescind.
The sea I fled still breaks against my core.
This morning frost had set the meadow white.
The river moved beneath its sheet of ice.
I saw my face there, caught in brittle light,
and knew a life of quiet won’t suffice.
I am the inland now. I am the tree
that stands alone and calls survival peace.
But you are still the water under me—
a hidden current no winter can release.




