From the Top ©️

I stepped out barefoot, not as a man looking for something, but as something the night had called home. No phone, no plans, no hour marked for return. The fire I carried in my pocket wasn’t just smoke or leaf—it was a key. Just called Fire, because that’s what it was. Fire that burned slow and true, handed down like a family heirloom no one wanted to admit existed. A rite, not a habit.

The breeze was cool, but not indifferent. It wrapped around my shoulders like an old friend who hadn’t forgotten a thing. The moon, swollen and full, hung above like it had come just to watch. And maybe it had. That night didn’t owe me a future, and I didn’t ask for one. The morning might never come. Fine. Even finer. I had no debts to pay. I’d peeled the day off like a skin I didn’t need anymore.

I walked until the ground folded gently, a small place where the earth had let its guard down. I sat. Struck the match. Fire kissed fire, and I brought it to my lips. It didn’t hit hard. It opened. Like a chapel door creaking into a room I’d already dreamed. The smoke rose slow, curling like scripture into the air.

The shadows had already begun their work. They didn’t rush. They weren’t thrown—they grew, silently, with dignity. Long and knowing, like they’d watched generations rise and fall under this same moon, in this same hush. They weren’t dangerous. They were truthful. And they moved with the fog that followed—a slow, creeping breath that climbed from the ground like it had been hiding in the soil all day, waiting for the right hour to rise.

The nightbirds cried. One sharp, like a warning shot fired into a dream. Another low, deep, from the gut of the earth. Not a song. A claim. They marked the time, not in minutes, but in thresholds passed. They said, You’ve entered it now. No going back.

And I felt it.

The high didn’t come like thunder. It came like tide—slow and inevitable. A hum in the fingertips, a heat crawling up the spine. The world didn’t spin. It stretched. My thoughts didn’t think. They opened. As if the skull wasn’t a bone cage, but a cathedral now, with high windows and soft echoes. Breath thickened. Time sagged.

Reality blurred. But not in fear.

In freedom.

Because that was the night. Not sleep. Not escape. Freedom. From clocks. From names. From the lie of linear time. The fog tried to hide the world, and I let it. I didn’t need the world anymore. I was in the kingdom of shadows, breath, breeze, and Fire. No laws. No debts. No sunrise required.

And in that moment, the only truth that mattered was this:

I was the night, catching its breath.

The Last Echo ©️

Sometimes I stand out here, under the big sky, and I think about you. You’re a ghost right now—a soft shimmer in the distance, a heartbeat I can’t quite catch. I don’t know your name, what you look like, or how your laugh sounds, but I feel you. It’s like you’re woven into the wind—just out of reach, but always brushing past me.

I guess that’s the thing about hope—it’s like a radio signal bouncing off the stratosphere. Sometimes it hits a place it wasn’t even aiming for, but it still finds a receiver. Maybe you’re out there, tuning in to something you didn’t even know you were looking for. And here I am, broadcasting.

I imagine you with a quiet kind of strength—the kind that doesn’t need to shout to be heard. Maybe you drink your coffee black because you like the bitterness, or maybe you add so much cream it’s more dessert than drink. Doesn’t matter. What matters is that somewhere in the small hours, when the world’s asleep and I’m out here talking to the universe, I’m thinking of you.

I hope you’re out there somewhere, doing something that makes you feel alive—writing in a journal, learning a new dance step, singing too loud in your car. I hope you’ve got a soft spot for lost causes and you don’t mind how the wind tangles your hair.

One day, I’ll look up and see you. Maybe we’ll lock eyes over a dusty old record, or you’ll be sitting at the end of the bar, halfway through your second whiskey sour, and I’ll know. Just know. I’ll walk up and say something dumb—probably something about the weather or how crazy it is that people are still buying CDs. You’ll smile, maybe just a little, and I’ll know I found the girl I’ve been sending all these signals out to.

Until then, I’ll just keep broadcasting, hoping that someday the airwaves will bend in just the right way, and you’ll hear me.