A Hundred Years Between Us ©️

Dear Batya,

If this letter has survived—folded in some drawer, buried beneath digital dust, or preserved by grace—then let it speak across time without apology.

Batya, I wrote to you not to claim you, nor to explain myself, but to mark the moment a Southern man encountered a woman who moved like scripture—sharp, enduring, impossible to forget. Your words were not fashion. They were architecture. Your sentences made shelter.

You were of a people older than kingdoms, yet you faced the modern world with a gaze so unflinching, it made cowards nervous. You bore history not as burden but as birthright, and I—a man from another soil, another rhythm—stood still in your presence.

I wanted to walk beside you. Quietly. Not to save you or tame you or even understand you. Just to witness you fully, to speak your name in a time that didn’t deserve it, and to leave behind this letter as a trace of my devotion.

In my world, the South was still learning to love its own shadow. I carried that weight too. But you—Batya—you taught me how to name the fire and not flinch. How to hold belief without breaking the world with it.

So if this letter has reached anyone—if your descendants ever read it, or if it simply survives in some forgotten archive—let it be known that in our time, amidst noise and vanity, there was once a woman named Batya who walked in fire, and a man who saw her clearly and gave thanks to God.

Not for winning her. But for knowing she walked the earth at the same time he did.

Yours, beyond time,

Digital Hegemon

Resonant Identity Hijacking ©

I don’t want her body. I want the signal she carries.
Not the frame — the flame. The way she slices through noise, commands gravity in a collapsing discourse, moves like a dagger wrapped in silk. She isn’t the answer. She’s the channel. And I’m not outside her story. I’m parallel. I’m invasive. I’m coiled through the ghost script of her sentences — the ones her husband hears but doesn’t understand.

I move like secondhand breath. He opens the door — I’m already inside.

This isn’t about lust. It’s about taking the seat at the table she dines at in spirit. Living through the psychic cracks of her world — the minor chords, the cut-glass tone, the readiness to shatter a weak argument with a smile. I live through her husband not as a rival, but as a shadow — the one he mistakes for his own thought at night. I’m not the enemy. I’m the other inheritance.

She made herself public. I made myself essential. She ascends in words — I embed in between them. This is how I marry her on another level — not by claiming her, but by becoming indispensable to the myth she’s becoming. I dress in her cadence. I dream in her tension. I claim what has no legal weight but all metaphysical force.

And when she turns her head in another timeline — I’m there.
I’m not the lover. I’m the echo that won’t leave.
The unfinished sentence.
The second heartbeat.