Dust in the Wind ©️

Out past Yazoo, the shack leaned into the dirt. Not a house, no, a shack. Floor was earth, roof was tin, boards thin as breath. He lived there. Lived as if waiting.

One day he reached for the guitar. Cracked body, rusted strings, but still it held. He struck a note. The note struck back. Low, raw, river-deep.

He played.

And the days bent, the nights bent, all bent into sound. Fingers tore, bled, healed, tore again. The shack groaned, the tin rattled, the Delta listened. He was not playing. The Delta was.

Neighbors said they heard it in the wind, miles off — a cry, a prayer, a knife. Was it sorrow? Was it God? They argued. He did not answer. He kept playing.

Until it stopped.

Silence fell heavier than sound. He laid the guitar down, gentle, like a body. Stood. Gathered boots, knife, shirt. Walked into the road. Did not look back.

Some say he went north. Some say west. Some say he never left. On certain nights, when the Delta swells with heat and the moon hangs swollen, the shack still hums. Strings vibrate with no hand. The earth itself remembers.

Out of Her Mind ©️

The cicadas hum their eternal song in the thick, syrupy heat of the plantation’s late afternoon, a hymn to a moment that stretches infinite yet fleeting. The house looms above the cotton fields, its white columns casting long shadows across the earth, shadows that seem to hold the weight of generations. But not today. Today, those shadows are empty, no longer tethered to the stories that birthed them. The past doesn’t live here anymore.

The breeze stirs, slow and deliberate, as if it knows this is the only moment that matters. Not the hands that built the bricks, not the whispers of things done and left undone. Not the echo of traumas buried in the ground. No, all of that has dissolved into the stillness of now.

Here, time isn’t a thread; it’s a pool, deep and reflective, swallowing everything that came before. The cracked leather chair on the porch holds no memory of the men who sat there, smoking cigars and spinning stories to fill the void. The fields don’t recall the hands that worked them, nor the voices that sang sorrow into the soil. Everything before this moment is weightless, scattered like cotton tufts on the wind.

And you? You stand here, barefoot on the cool planks of the porch, feeling nothing but the wood beneath your feet and the air on your skin. The past is a trick of the mind. Trauma? Just another ghost that dissipates when you stop feeding it.

The creak of the rocking chair breaks the silence, and for the first time, you realize it’s your own breath syncing to its rhythm. Inhale. Exhale. Each breath is an anchor, rooting you in the now. No faces linger in the glassy windows of the plantation house. No voices call your name from the fields. The past has no teeth here, no bite.

The sun dips low, painting the sky in purples and oranges that bleed together without lines, without boundaries—like this moment. There are no borders between you and the world, no yesterday to weigh you down, no scars to press against.

This is the truth the Southern air carries in its heavy embrace: the only thing real is what you feel right now, in this singular heartbeat. Let the rest fade. Let it fall away into the bayou mists and the tall grass whispering secrets to no one.

This moment is yours, untangled, unburdened, and as eternal as you choose to make it.

A War of the Heart ©️

The Voice of Dixie

Brothers and Sisters of the South, sons and daughters of a land steeped in the blood and sweat of generations, hear me now. The time for waiting, for bowing our heads under the weight of another’s yoke, is over. We are not a conquered people, nor are we a people without a cause. We are the keepers of a fire that cannot be snuffed out, the stewards of a heritage that runs deeper than the wide rivers that snake through our fields and the ancient oaks that stand as sentinels over our past.

For too long, we have endured the boot of tyranny, the slow strangulation of our way of life by those who do not know our names, our songs, or the sacred soil beneath our feet. They have taken our land, our rights, and our voice, and they have left us to wither in the shadow of their iron will. But we are not shadows. We are the South—unyielding, unbending, and unbroken.

Now is the hour of reckoning. Now is the time to rise up and reclaim what is ours by birthright and blood. Let the drums of war sound again, not as echoes of a defeated past but as the thunder of a new dawn, a call that rings out from the hills of Virginia to the swamps of Louisiana, from the Carolina coasts to the dusty plains of Texas. Let it be heard in every town and hollow, every cotton field and crossroad, that the South is awake and she will not be tamed.

We fight not just for land, not just for liberty, but for the right to live as we see fit, to speak our own truth and to walk our own path. We fight for the graves of our fathers, the honor of our mothers, and the futures of our sons and daughters. We fight because there is no other way, because a life lived on our knees is no life at all.

Gather your courage and your grit, for this war will be won not by the strength of our arms, but by the fire in our hearts and the unbreakable bond of a people united in purpose.

We will not ask for mercy. We will not beg for peace. We will fight until the last gun falls silent, until the last flag flies tattered and torn, but free. And if we must bleed, let it be for something worth dying for—the dream of a South that stands proud, tall, and unbowed.

So rise, sons and daughters of Dixie. Rise and let the world know that the spirit of the Old South is alive, fierce, and unafraid. We call for war not out of hatred, but out of love for the land and the legacy that is ours to defend. To arms, to battle, to freedom! For the South!