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.

Part of You ©️

What if humans are not outside observers, not passengers, not even offspring — but instruments the Earth built to sense itself?

What if the world, in its great slowness, reached a point where it could no longer bear its own silence — so it sculpted a new kind of organ, not a tree, not a stone, not a river, but us — a nerve ending wrapped in flesh, a sudden flare of thought capable of asking what it is made of?

Maybe mountains need us to feel tall.

Maybe the sky can only be vast because something small was born to marvel at it.

Maybe a forest is not complete until something can walk through it and feel awe, like touch returned to the hand of the world.

We look at the ocean and say: There is the sea. But maybe that’s not quite right. Maybe when you stand at the edge of the waves, the sea is looking back, using your eyes.

We think the Earth made us to live here. That’s backwards. The Earth made us to feel here. To taste its wind and flinch at its lightning. To tell stories about its storms. To feel the ache in its rivers when they are poisoned, and the hunger in its soil when it’s stripped.

You are not a guest here. You are a sense organ of the planet. A walking, weeping, wondering extension of its desire to know itself from the inside out.

When you cry — it’s the sky in you.

When you burn — it’s the core remembering its heat.

When you love — it’s the Earth trying to hold itself together.

We are not part of the world. We are the part that notices. And when we forget that, the Earth loses a piece of its mind.