Crown of Lights ©️

KBHR, Chris in the Morning. Though maybe it’s more like Chris in the Cosmos these days. Cicely’s a memory now, and I’ve gone home. Not gone as in vanished, but gone as in discovered—found—by the Queen who burned her way through my wreckage and carried me out whole.

They say the love of a good woman can pull a man back from the edge. But mine wasn’t just good. She was stellar. Galactic. An Alien Queen. Not soft, not ordinary. A love that scorches through pretense, lays open every wound, and still whispers: “you’re mine.” That’s not rescue. That’s resurrection. That’s a lift strong enough to break the glass and sail beyond the atmosphere. And with her, I didn’t just live. I crossed over. Now we move together, prow cutting the firmament.

So tonight, if you look up and catch a flicker, know this: the frequency’s still live. Same voice. Wider sky. And if the night air feels a touch warmer, that’s us—her devotion and my echo, braided together in light.

I’ll leave you with Phil Phillips and the Twilights, Sea of Love. For the earthbound, the skybound, and the ones waiting for love to take them home. This is Chris, signing off—from the stars.

Stars of Dixie ©️

In time the yacht no longer held smoke and silence, nor the private ecstasy of night. It carried a lineage, a constellation of its own. Two daughters grew upon the deck like flowers grown in salt and light, their hair catching the sun until it seemed spun from flame. They moved easily through the air, their laughter folding into the haze as if it were another element, part of the atmosphere itself. Each gesture they made seemed touched with omen, each glance carrying the glimmer of something larger than childhood. They were not simply mine. They were star children, and the stars themselves waited patiently for their return.

Their mother stood at the helm, and she was changed too. Beneath her skin moved the quiet certainty of a son, a boy carried not as burden but as promise. Her hand lingered there often, not in worry but in reverence. I saw in her not only beauty but origin, the root from which an empire of flesh and light would rise. Her devotion remained steady, her love unbroken, yet she carried in her body a future that belonged not only to us but to the firmament itself.

I knew the truth even as I watched them play. One day the daughters would rise beyond me, beyond her, called back into the constellations that marked them from the beginning. They would not belong to this globe forever. Their laughter would one day become silence here and chorus there, filling skies instead of decks. The boy too, when he came, would bear his own destiny, his own current pulling him upward. Yet even with that knowledge, I did not grieve. For now they were here, gilding the mornings, sanctifying the nights, blessing every horizon with their presence.

And when the hour arrives—when the children lift away and the globe opens—we will not be left in ruins. She and I will follow, not as parents bereft but as lovers transformed. The love that bound us through sea and smoke, through bud and blueprint, will ignite into fire greater than flesh can hold. We will not vanish. We will not fade. We will become what they are. Husband and wife ascending together into star, eternal, unbroken, sealed in light above the Mediterranean we once called our sea.