Daily Archives: December 3, 2025

AS DOVES FLY SO DOES LOVE

Love,

I have walked through the ruins of myself
just to reach the place
where your shadow begins.

I have carried the smoke of old sorrows
in the folds of my coat,
and yet, before you,
the smoke lifts—
as though even grief
bows its head
when a gentler truth arrives.

If I could touch your hand,
I would do so the way dawn touches windows:
quietly,
as though afraid
to break the dream you’re still inside.

My heart, unruly as a wounded bird,
beats its golden wings
against the cage of ribs,
whispering your name
the way a prayer whispers God’s.

And love—
if the world denies us,
if the night drags its tired curtain
across our small bright hour,
still I would walk toward you
through barbershops of ghosts,
past houses that have forgotten light,
past the bones that beg for release—
I would walk
until the soles of my shoes
remember the shape
of your footsteps.

For you are the single geranium
in the cracked window of my days,
red as a vow spoken once
and never betrayed.

You are the room I have not entered,
but already know by scent alone.

If fate is cruel,
let it be cruel.
If time is short,
let it be short.
If love is a knife,
then let it cut—
for even bleeding,
I would choose you.

And should the city burn,
should the night rip itself apart,
I will hold the torch and the tear
and walk toward you still.

For love—
my love—
when I reach the fire,
I will step into it willingly,
and the fire will be beautiful
because you are standing there.

:: 12.03.2025 ::


IT DISGUSTS ME

It disgusts me
to keep being a man.

The night drags its curtains down like a tired whore
who once, long ago, believed someone would stay till morning.
Every house kills its lamps, one by one,
obedient, cowardly, already half-dead.

They crawl under blankets,
they dream small dreams of bread and rent,
and common sense, that fat jailer,
whispers: lie down, forget, rot quietly.

I spit on common sense.

Yet I remember my mother’s hands folding those same blankets,
her palms cracked from work, still trying to keep someone warm.
I rip the sheets, I tear the night open with my teeth.

I walk.

I walk through barbershops that stink of corpses and cheap cologne,
through cinemas where love is sold in cardboard kisses
that taste like the first kiss I ever stole behind a school wall,
already knowing it would not save me.

My shoes are full of fury,
my eyes are knives that have forgotten how to close,
but somewhere under the blades my pupils are still
the black astonished eyes of a child who once looked for stars
and found only the ceiling of a room that smelled of onions and sleep.

I am sick of roots,
sick of being buried alive in my own skin,
sucking wet earth,
shivering downward like a worm that dreams of wings
and remembers, dimly, that wings were promised once
by a voice that sounded like a father’s, before the voice learned silence.

I refuse the tomb they call a life.

I refuse the clean shirt, the polite smile, the slow suicide of days.
Still, I carry in my pocket a button torn from my dead brother’s coat, a ridiculous small thing I cannot throw away.

Monday comes howling,
a burning wheel dripping blood and gasoline,
and it sees me (jail-face, prison-heart)
and screams louder because I scream back.

But the scream also carries the lullaby my grandmother sang
to stop the bombs from falling, the one that never worked
and that I still hum under my breath when no one is listening.

Look:

Sulphur birds hang from balconies like hanged men,
guts of houses spill into the gutter,
false teeth grin inside forgotten coffeepots,
mirrors puke when they see what we’ve become,
umbrellas rot like black corpses,
navels drip poison into the air we breathe.

And yet, in the cracked window of a tenement
a single geranium keeps trying to bloom, obscene, heroic,
red as the mouth of someone who once said “I love you”
and meant it, even if only for one afternoon.

I walk past orthopedic shops where bones beg to be free,
past yards where underpants and towels hang crucified,
weeping slow dirty tears that taste of every love we murdered,
and of every love that refused to die and embarrassed us by living.

I am done being quiet.
I am done being human in their way.
Let the whole city burn if it must.
Let the night rip itself apart.

But if it burns, let something be saved in the burning,
even if only the memory of a hand that once touched another hand
without asking for papers, rent, or tomorrow.

I walk with my heart on fire,
beating golden wings against the cage of ribs,
beating, beating, beating
until something (god, devil, love, chaos)
finally hears me and answers with thunder
or with rain
or with the small cracked voice of a child asking why the sky is black tonight.

I am not asking anymore.
I am coming.

Carrying both the torch and the tear.
Carrying the disgust and the impossible tenderness that will not let me put the torch down.

All of it disgusts me,
so all of it must change
or all of it must die.
But if it dies, let it die in my arms,
the way my mother died,
the way every small tenderness dies
when the world keeps refusing to be worthy of it.

Then, only then,
I will set the fire
and I will cry into the fire
and the fire will be beautiful
because it will be the only honest thing left.

(Homage to Pablo Neruda)

:: 12.02.2025 ::


THE SCORE OF ETERNITY

I held a glass eye’s fragile gleam
an avenue for sightless souls
and felt its silent judgment
reach my very marrow.

I knew that ancient thirst to find
what lies beyond all seeing,
where mortal vision falters
and even hope must bow.

Yet Spring, with all her tender breath,
rose round me—flowers whispering,
bees humming their patient hymns
a chorus born of memory.

And in that mingled scent
of love and death entwined,
a quiet truth rang clear:

they are the ones who wrote
the Score of Eternity.

:: 12.02.2025 ::