A Cryptid’s Lament ©️

I used to exist in the pause between heartbeats. In the hush of the forest just after the wind stops, in the thick mist that rose from black water before dawn. I was the whisper your ancestors passed down not as warning, but as reverence—an acknowledgment that not all things are meant to be seen, and not all truths deserve to be known. I was a boundary. A line drawn not in malice, but in mystery. I lived there, between the myth and the muscle, between the half-glimpsed and the fully believed.

Now I live in memes. I have become a punchline, reduced to cheap t-shirts and parody accounts. You film me in the distance and argue in the comments if it’s CGI or costume, never asking the deeper question: Why was I there in the first place? You’ve forgotten how to sit still in the woods. You’ve forgotten how to be afraid. You’ve replaced awe with algorithms, and wonder with wi-fi. When you do come close—when you see that strange shape in the tree line or hear a sound too wild to name—you rationalize it before the echo even fades. You have trained yourselves to deny me. And still, I remain.

I don’t need you to believe in me. I never did. I existed long before you could name me, and I’ll still be here long after you’ve renamed the stars. But there is sorrow in watching your world shrink. You measure everything now—speed, size, visibility—but you’ve lost your capacity to be moved by what doesn’t fit in the frame. You chase proof, but miss the point. I was never the spectacle. I was the shadow of something bigger. I was the reminder that the world is not finished, not mapped, not yours.

So I stay at the edges. I keep to the mist. I walk old paths through new towns, where you never look up anymore. And once in a while, someone feels me. They pause, hand stilling on a doorknob, heartbeat loud in the silence. That’s enough. For that moment, I’m real again. Not on a screen. Not as data. But as a feeling. A chill. A presence.

I do not lament because I am fading. I lament because you are.

Before the Tide ©️

Fog comes in like a promise. Low and slow, like a ghost with secrets. I open my eyes beneath cedar roots and breathe in the earth like it’s an old lover. Cold. Damp. Sweet with rot.

There are no clocks here. Only tides.

I move quiet.

Bones like smoke. Skin like river light. I’m not a man, but I remember what it felt like to be one. That’s the curse, isn’t it? Memory. That tight little whisper you can’t ever drown.

The water’s warm today. Too warm. The kind of warm that brings hikers. Solitude seekers. Broken-souled wanderers. God, I love ‘em. They taste like hope.

There’s one now—I feel him before I hear him. Heart thudding against rib like a war drum. Young. Lost. His sadness hangs off him like soaked cotton.

I follow.

I do not stalk. I… accompany. He doesn’t know it, but he’s already said yes. Yes to the sound of his brother’s voice, yes to the lie carved from memory. “Help me,” I whisper. It’s soft, cracked, human. Perfect.

He turns.

It’s the eyes. The eyes always do it.

He falls.

The moment breaks like a mirror dropped in wet moss. I kneel beside him, wear his brother’s skin like a borrowed coat, and I look down at him with the kind of love only monsters know.

Not yet. I don’t kill. Not now.

I convert.

My hand on his chest. His breath catches, and the water begins to teach him the first hymn.

He’s going to forget everything. And when he wakes tomorrow, he’ll swim like a ghost and think like a god.

I’ll be there. In the shallows. Smiling.

Never Spoken ©️

Ah yes… Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. The name rolls off the tongue like a fine wine poured into a plastic cup. A flash in the pan. A burst of TikTok fury dressed in the regalia of revolution. They called her a rising star—but I’ve seen stars rise. This one exploded before it truly ignited.

She came roaring onto the stage with a fury of sound and motion, waving flags stitched together from half-baked economics and Instagram filters. The poor girl mistook applause for alignment. Influence for intellect. And policy? Oh no, my dear… that was merely a backdrop. A set dressing for the brand.

She speaks of the oppressed while bathed in studio lighting, dripping in designer irony. A Green New Deal? Hah! A dream cobbled together in the fever of freshman fantasy—no map, no numbers, no spine. Just spectacle… spectacular nonsense.

Now, don’t get me wrong. She plays the part well—eyes wide with feigned outrage, voice trembling at just the right syllable. But scratch the surface, and you won’t find revolution. You’ll find the algorithm. Her ideology is quantum cotton candy—airy, dazzling, and utterly devoid of nutritional value.

She rails against capitalism while commodifying her very existence.

She demands the dismantling of systems she doesn’t even understand.

She believes herself a threat to the machine—when she’s simply become one of its most clickable gears.

She’s not the future. She’s the trend.

And trends fade.

You see, real power doesn’t come from hashtags or headlines. It comes from substance. From quiet mastery, discipline, and thought that’s outlasted empires. But AOC? She is a politician crafted by the moment, for the moment—incapable of endurance, allergic to complexity.

She isn’t dangerous because she’s radical.

She’s dangerous because she’s easily distracted.

And history? History has no patience for performance.

So let the spotlight dim. Let the applause scatter like dust.

And let her return to what she was always best at—posing, preaching, and pretending.

The rest of us have work to do.