Daylight at Alton ©️

It was noon, and the light was merciless. The Mississippi lay wide and silvery, barges moving as though they were hauling whole centuries behind them. I steered off the road, the tires grinding on gravel, and for a moment I thought the sun might burn straight through the glass. My eyes stung, though I couldn’t say if it was from the glare or from crying.

She was beside me, hair spilling with gold where the light caught it. And I kept thinking—this is the last time. No night to fold us into secrecy, no shadows to soften the edges. Just the pitiless glare of day, stripping everything bare. I reached for her, awkward, frantic, as though my hands could invent a language my mouth couldn’t find. The car was hot, the air thick. Sweat and tears blurred together until I couldn’t tell one from the other.

I knew then it wasn’t love. It was ruin. A final collision of skin against skin, as though we could press hard enough to turn back clocks, to stop the collapse. She tried to speak, but all I remember is the shape of her mouth, the silence of it. A goodbye too fragile to make a sound.

After, we sat still. Our breathing shallow, our eyes turned toward the river. The sunlight struck the water with such brilliance it seemed cruel. I wanted to leave. I wanted never to leave. The river went on. I did not.

Sometimes She Forgets ©️

The connection between alcohol and love, once cast in mythic gold, has a darker side—a side soaked not in romance but in ruin. For while the drink may unlock the heart, it often blinds the eye. It confuses want for worth, lust for loyalty, and thrill for truth. What begins as a liberation can end in entrapment, like a siren’s song luring a ship toward rocks just beneath the surface. Alcohol makes promises it cannot keep, and love born in its shadow often turns brittle by morning.

Metaphorically, this pairing is not a dance but a duel. Alcohol hands you a sword with no grip, and love dares you to fight with it. You swing wildly, drunk on potential, slashing through your own boundaries and illusions. But in the sobering light of day, you discover that you’ve cut yourself more deeply than anyone else ever could. You mistook chemistry for connection, body heat for soulmate warmth. And when it’s over, you aren’t just heartbroken—you’re hollowed out, wondering if any of it was real.

For some, this cycle becomes addictive. The chaos of love mixed with liquor becomes a kind of ritual sacrifice: you offer up your clarity, your safety, even your dignity, hoping for one more night that feels like meaning. You keep returning to that temple of illusion, drinking from the same poisoned chalice, hoping it’ll turn to wine again. But it doesn’t. It never does.

And then there is the fatal metaphor—not just the death of a romance, but the slow spiritual decay of the self. When love is always sought under the influence, it never quite touches the soul. You forget what sober love feels like, what real intimacy looks like. You come to believe that connection only happens in the haze, that the only way to feel close is to be far from yourself. In time, this belief erodes the heart, corrodes the mind. You become a ghost of your own longing, chasing phantoms in the dark, mistaking every kiss for salvation and every silence for damnation.

So yes, alcohol and love may be dramatic lovers in myth, but in life, they are often tragic. Together, they can conjure ecstasy—but more often, they conspire to destroy what’s sacred: trust, clarity, self-respect. And what is left, once the glamour fades, is not romance but wreckage. Not a story—but a warning.