Category: Uncategorized

  • part 1: the pub below street level

    part 1: the pub below street level

    The last time I saw my dad was a week before I turned 19. I remember it vividly. Our relationship was pretty shaky at that point. We hadn’t seen each other in a while, and there was a significant emotional buildup—frustration, anger, and a bunch of other feelings I’m not even capable of naming.

    I wanted to meet up with him to talk about us. Our relationship. I wanted to tell him so much. That I really wanted him in my life because I loved him. That even though he hardly ever sent any alimony, I didn’t want this to be about money—but I also didn’t understand why he kept promising it, yet never followed through.

    I wanted to tell him I was tired of being the only one trying—always the one who texts, who calls, who asks to meet. He never picked up the phone just to say hello or what’s up? or how’s school? or do you have a girlfriend? I wanted to tell him I felt like he’d never really shown much interest in me. That he was full of big words when we spent time together, but rarely followed them through. And that whatever beef he had with Mum all those years ago didn’t have to poison our relationship.

    There was so much I wanted to say. So many questions. Most of them started with why.

    I was sad, angry, furious, upset, confused—and so nervous about seeing him that night. We agreed to meet up in a pub in my hometown. I really wanted us to be alone. This conversation was far too important to involve anyone else. It was about just the two of us. He promised he’d come alone. Somehow, I had a hard time believing that.

    The pub he suggested was one of his old locals—he used to go there when he was young, when he was my age, when he met Mum. I’d been in once or twice before, but it just wasn’t my jam.

    The night was dark. The streetlights made it possible to see just a few flickering stars in an otherwise pitch-black sky. I felt the cold; the tips of my fingers were going numb fast. Mum usually reminds me to put on gloves and a hat, but she wasn’t around that night. The collar of my thick wool jumper was itching my neck, and I felt uncomfortable. My legs were stiff, and the thin, freezing fabric of my chinos clung tightly to them. It was only a short walk to the pub, but I started shaking as soon as it appeared in sight. I couldn’t tell if it was because of the cold or the anticipation of what might come.

    And just like that, there it was—the pub.

    It was one of those places tucked just below street level, so you had to go down a few steps to get in. As you descended, a big room opened up with low, arched ceilings. Dim, artificial lighting gave the place a permanent headache vibe. No music. Hardly any people. You could hear a pin drop.

    There was a profound heaviness behind the few drunken eyes that briefly glanced up as the door closed behind you. But just as quickly, and with an unbothered attitude, they’d sink back into their bottomless pints.

    The décor was dark and worn. Huge wooden tables sat on a thin, grey-stained carpet that barely muffled the creaky floor beneath. The walls—once bleach white—now stood yellow. And then there was the smell: cheap beer, decades of cigarette smoke, and deep-fried food, hanging in the air like old arguments.

  • quiet paragraph: even better

    quiet paragraph: even better

    If you could say just one sentence before you vanished—before your name faded, your photos dissolved, your memories scattered—what would it be?


    Look at the person right next to you, ask them how they are and just listen, give them as much space as they need…
    You don’t know them? Even better.

  • 3:07am

    3:07am

    What do you do when you can’t sleep? 

    Toss and turn?  What about sheep—how many can you count before you start counting your breaths?  One.  Two.  Eight.  Lost count.   

    Do you reach out for your book because it works when you go to sleep in the evening?  

    And what else works?  Chamomile tea.  But you have to get up and your bare feet will feel the chill of the kitchen floor.  How about the good old milk and honey?  Your gran used to make that for you when your eyes wouldn’t close.

    Am I the only one awake?

    Have you checked the time?

    2:13.

    2:16.

    2:21.

    Is the time mocking you?

    Have you checked Instagram?

    3:07.

    You could roll a joint—there’s still some left from last night.  The other side of the pillow is so cold.  That’s why you can’t sleep.  You can hear the distant hum of the city.  The random car driving past flashing its headlights through your bedroom window for a split second.  That single clicking noise you just heard coming from downstairs.  Why does sleep hate you tonight?  Taking magnesium before sleep is yet another social-media-influencer-type-of-a-bullshit.  The conversation with dad is giving you a queasy stomach.  Your chest is closing in as you vividly remember the awkward encounter at the gym.  Was it awkward?  She smiled, you made a noise.  Did you?  You did.  Was it weird?  Did she do anything?  What did your dad say again?  Don’t want to replay the conversation?  Quick, think of something else.  But what?  Alright, it’s time to sleep!

    If I fall asleep now, I’ll get exactly three hours and sixteen minutes.  No…fifteen. 

    Go on, get out of bed.  Get the fresh bedding out.  That’s why you can’t sleep—you haven’t changed your bed in a month.  Disgusting.  In fact, take a shower.  A hot one, to calm down, to chill.  Alright, change the bed…take a shower…and sleep?  Can you though because you can feel the absolute emptiness in your stomach.  It feels hollow.  And it sounds it, too.  It’s late but you know you can’t fall asleep with an empty stomach!  Alright, change the bed…take a shower…have a snack…and sleep!  Fresh air might do you good, don’t you think?  Just 10 minutes.  It won’t make much of a difference, plus it’s a guarantee you’ll fall asleep!  Just round the block, slowly.  Where’s the jacket?  This is so much effort but alright, change the bed…take a shower…have a snack…take a walk and then sleep!  Wait—why don’t you have a snack on the walk?  Clever!  You’re not just a pretty face!  

    Tomorrow’s almost here!  Am I excited about it, or dreading it? 

    Can you even tell?  

    You hit the pillow, dressed in fresh linen, cheeks and the backs of your hands still kinda cold from outside.  The hair at the back of your head a little wet because you rushed the shower.  You turn over to lie on your back because that feels comfy.  It’s like a new opportunity to close your eyes and blissfully drift away.  A missed one though.  Your eyes have no desire to stay closed, you’re wide awake.  You have been for hours.  You’re the creature of the dark that will have to pretend to thrive when the sun comes up.  There’s a sense of resignation.  You don’t fight it anymore, you’ve given in.  You’re lying motionless on your back, staring at the ceiling.  You stopped trying.  Everything goes still and silent, you close your eyes for just a second.

    The alarm goes off, it’s 7am.  

    Maybe insomnia has secrets for you.  Will you listen?

  • quiet paragraph: on writing

    quiet paragraph: on writing

    Writing feels peaceful.
    The cadence of keys being tapped or the steady pace of pen on paper—it’s one of the most grounded moments I can imagine. Especially when you’re fully in it, when the brain, the hand, the keyboard, and the paper stop feeling like separate parts and become one.

    Whether you sit down with clear intention or just let it happen doesn’t really matter.
    What counts are the words that come out—and they always do. You show up with vulnerability, and somehow the deep connection you’re creating feels easier in solitude. That’s your cue to embrace it.

    A blank page doesn’t judge.
    It doesn’t interrupt or expect anything. It simply waits. So write your little heart out. Tell it your darkest memories, your quietest secrets, your unspoken desires.

    Share your grand ideas and your silliest philosophies.
    Let it hold your weight, your wonder, your wandering thoughts. Play. Let go of boundaries. Just write.

  • do you have a place you can call a little piece of heaven?

    do you have a place you can call a little piece of heaven?

    A place that grounds you. That pulls you out of the everyday rush. That gives you a gentle nudge with its quiet presence.

    Because while you can’t really remember what happens between the time you wake up and the time you go to bed, your little piece of heaven has been nowhere but here.

    And where have you been?

    Kissing your partner goodbye without noticing the worry in her eyes. Grabbing a coffee but missing the handwritten note wishing you a good day from the nameless barista. Bumping into a friend but not feeling the hand on your shoulder when he asked how you were doing.

    It dials down the volume of your thoughts. It slows the world down. It gives you space.

    Because while you’re breathing but not living, watching but not seeing, hearing but not listening—your little piece of heaven has been here, quietly waiting.

    For who?

    The ring on your finger reminds you you’re a husband. The number of followers reminds you you’re a friend. The missed call reminds you you’re a son.
    But are you really?

    You know this little piece of heaven is beautiful and completely ordinary. And you know it’s not about the place—it’s about you. It’s always been about you.

    It’s priceless to have a space where you can come back to yourself. So cherish it. Keep it sacred. And most importantly, keep going back.

    Keep connecting with yourself.

  • it will bloom again

    I was cruising along, unaware of the speed.
    Was I going slow? Or fast?
    Trees passed by.
    Behind them, vast fields held the late winter mood—
    sleepy, reluctant to wake,
    still wrapped in a blanket no one’s quite ready to toss aside.
    Not yet.

    Because
    things fall apart and time breaks your heart
    just to show you:
    blooming, vivid color is just around the corner.

    I sank deeper into the seat.
    The muddy road, the bare branches scratching the roof,
    the cold, unkept grass—it all felt familiar.
    She felt familiar.
    We both belonged to this bleak limbo.

    She was your girl. You showed her the world
    and she didn’t like it.

    I was cruising.
    She wasn’t.
    She stopped.
    I didn’t come back.
    She didn’t catch up.
    And that’s how some things end.

    It takes time to climb out of the limbo.
    The mud doesn’t want to let go.
    The scratches stay just beneath the skin.
    But—

    you fell out of love and you both let go
    and that’s okay.
    Because you’re not too slow,
    not too fast—
    you’re just cruising.

    The winter moods.
    The silence.
    The cold grass wrapped around your body.
    The weight of the uninviting mud.
    It all makes space
    for the softest whisper:

    You won’t see her at the back of your mind in her eyes.
    And your wildflower—
    it will bloom again.

  • quiet paragraph: where the raindrops land

    I’m sitting at the dining table, watching the world go by outside our kitchen window. My soft gaze suggests I’m unbothered—but really, I’m hoping to catch a glimpse of creativity passing by.

    The pen, gently resting between my fingers, is begging for attention, and I’m letting it dry out carelessly. Empty sheets of yellowed paper wait patiently beneath my hand, as if they know they’ll be soaked in ink sooner or later. I admire that kind of confidence—because all I can focus on is the rain.

    The sky isn’t clouded. It’s just grey. Miles and miles of moodiness. It’s dull, it’s bleak, and I’ve chosen to hide away from it just so I can indulge in it. I’m aware of every raindrop landing in its place—seemingly the final stop. But don’t be fooled. It’s only a small part of the journey.

    And maybe that’s the same with days like this. When nothing seems to move forward, when words don’t flow, and the world feels soggy and still—maybe that’s not the end. Maybe it’s just another stop along the way.

  • the all-too-familiar old wardrobe

    the all-too-familiar old wardrobe

    Waking up with the feeling of being at home is precious to me. This morning, when I opened my eyes and saw the all-too-familiar old wardrobe standing tall in the corner of the room, a sense of contentment wrapped around me like the thick blanket lying across my body.

    The air was cold and crisp, and a faint scent of wood lingered in the room. Sunlight peeked through the gaps around the blinds, framing the window in a soft glow.

    It’s been a while since I started my day like this, and so I stayed in bed for a while, soaking it in. I felt I deserved this moment—this quiet, familiar stillness—and naturally, I wanted to let it linger.

    It’s not really the wardrobe—it’s the feeling. That sense of rootedness, of knowing where the light switch is without needing to look. It’s the grounding energy, it’s letting my feet navigate the old wooden floors without thinking. It’s the endless memories. It’s the falling into a warm, soft hug.

    It’s home.

    Over the past few months, most mornings have felt like being pulled out of water mid-dream—confusing, disorienting. But today, I floated. It wasn’t just refreshing; it was like taking a breath of fresh air after gasping for one for far too long.