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Kairos-poetry
30/M/Where the sun shines
Where I come from - food looks perfect but always tastes watery. Here, cucumber and tomatoes have mineral arteries. Nomadic crypto bros enjoy fruity conversations. French girls showing me apps that map constellations. It's funny how new connections still leave me in solitude. Even when the reasons for leaving home seem to collude. All we see and feel is ultimately our own. Promising futures in our countries have sadly flown. Most seem to be fleeing, rather than becoming. I've never been religious - but this must be my second coming. I enjoy the relief of not weighing anyone's opinion. Living fully, no longer my ego's minion. First nights spent silently at a jazz festival. Instead of hiding and crying - behind my self-built wall. I've been afraid of writing without a broken soul as the source. I hope you find your strength - you too, could do it of course. No need to be like me, leaving everything behind. Maybe just for once, to yourself, simply be kind. I wish I could share this feeling of love. Believe me when I say: your life can in fact fit like a glove.
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Aug 6, 2025
Aug 6, 2025 at 4:15 PM UTC
Bulgaria 2
Looking back at my first week in Bulgaria... Do not compare Cyrillic to Russian or face hysteria! Don’t take it personal if folks seem grumpy or whiney, Their hearts are still huge, though their dogs are all tiny. A deep, proud history they gladly declare, While we Western Europeans seem to shout everywhere. I love the slow living, its pace and its grace, Yet curse when my beer is last place in the race. The first place I’ve been where no card tips apply, Only cash levs will put a spark in their eye. Five more weeks left to wander and play, To learn how the locals make a slow life feel okay.
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Aug 5, 2025
Aug 5, 2025 at 12:58 PM UTC
Bulgaria in a week
Drifting through new days Still I look into your eyes Each time I close mine
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Aug 3, 2025
Aug 3, 2025 at 1:00 PM UTC
Fleeting
Just when I needed it: companions, warm and kind. A baby-blue ******* mother, sharp and refined. Now I know, she’s saved her whole life to give, Each round, each smile, proof of the way she lives. Tremendous smile beneath a cap, humor bone dry. I let you overestimate me and I’ll never know why. Married to contrast, cold calling embassies, a landlord that has tenants as enemies. Majestic bearded bard with Rakija grace. In every tale, facts and fables found their place. Knowledge poured like wine - free hat, jokes, and care, Even speaking Bulgarian, like you were born there. So cheers to you; Jane, Tim, and Mike! I’m sure none of us will have a pear-shaped life!
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Aug 3, 2025
Aug 3, 2025 at 8:29 AM UTC
J-T-M
At life's next threshold I can live my questions now Not drowned in answers
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Aug 3, 2025
Aug 3, 2025 at 5:50 AM UTC
New beginnings
Do you know how butterflies come to life? It’s more frightening than you might think. Born crawling a caterpillar, close to the ground naïve to the sky simply existing, tasting the world leaf by leaf. And then it begins. A hush inside the body, a quiet undoing. Behaviors shift, instincts sharpen, the soul sketches its wings in secret. The old self unravels. Did you know that little caterpillar melts into goo? Not a creature in waiting just formless, floating cells. And from that a butterfly emerges, grown entirely from what was already there. I’ve been stuck in that goo the nowhere between trauma and metamorphosis, neither alive nor lost, just suspended. But this summer brought tears as ink, and from the scribbled ache came liberating wings fragile but certain, drawn from silence. I've started flying. But I still glance down when I shouldn’t afraid that my pride and joy will be mistaken for arrogance. Yet I’m proud proud that I can love again. Proud that flying feels so familiar. I like to land booping noses of dogs showing up beside strangers on quiet benches. To hear their voices for the very first time to sense the tremble of their own becoming. And when I look, I see it: a shimmer in their stillness, a whisper in their pause. The butterfly still hidden in its goo. And I hope they’ll pass it on this softness, this seeing. That ripple we call the butterfly effect
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Jul 7, 2025
Jul 7, 2025 at 12:56 PM UTC
The Butterfly Effect
Poverty, all around. The poor squeezed dry by every system, every suit, every layer of government. I’ve decided to leave, to live light, to give away what I no longer carry. Not to make a point, just to move. No one told me how. No school wrote back. No agency replied. No office opened the door. I asked. I waited. I knocked. Silence. So now, I give away for free what they would charge rent to store, tax to sell, or fine me for leaving behind. Not out of wealth, but because generosity feels like defiance in a world this rigid. They won’t tell me where to go just how to stay in place. I only heard rules as a reply No humanity in their solutions But I’m not waiting anymore
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Jul 4, 2025
Jul 4, 2025 at 11:29 AM UTC
Frustration
Today, I remembered something I hadn’t thought of in fifteen years. I can picture myself, lying in bed, staring out the window hours past bedtime a kid, frightened, willing to make a deal with the devil. Exchanging the liberty I grew up in for a mirage of security, for stories I told myself. Trading attention, once abundant, for crushing invisibility like a child in a play with no parents in the crowd. Bartering for eternal solitude when connection was all I ever craved. I remember giving away everything I was meant to be for a life that made no difference. And it’s almost cruel, waking up now knowing I chose this path myself. It would be easier to be the victim. A thought hidden in a buried drawer, unearthed after fifteen years of digging. I think I’m alive again.
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Jul 3, 2025
Jul 3, 2025 at 7:42 PM UTC
Alive again
Driving to work felt quite boujee. Just two days of work and then I'm free. Traffic sounding like a symphony, Your words turned routine into poetry. Across the digital divide we meet, Strangers connected by rhythm and beat. In this virtual space, our souls converse, Bound by the magic of metered verse. Imagining a schoolbus, dogs galore, A whimsical scene that makes the heart soar. Like your poem, it brings a smile, a laugh, A reminder that joy is the true path. I say to you, with gratitude deep, For the solace your words allow me to keep. In poetry we trust, in verses we blend, Stranger no more, but a poetic friend.
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Jul 2, 2025
Jul 2, 2025 at 4:23 PM UTC
Whispers
I used to look up to success. Glossy and distant, like yachts pulling into sunlit harbors. While my brothers and I posed, thinking cool was something you wore. A picture snapped becomes a prophecy one we’re sold before we understand we're being trained to consume. We watched the boats drift in like kings returning from invisible wars. And my brother, bold, naïve, beautiful, pointed and said, “I’ll have one of those.” When asked how he’d pay, he simply explained: “I’ll get it from that wall, just like you do.” God, the way children believe - no fear in their hunger, no shame in their dreams. Maybe I’m just older now, my lenses fogged from wear. But all I see is people wrapped in things not selves, not stories, but trinkets, masks, trophies. Like they forgot that real wealth was once built on time, on tending soil, on tears held back while saying goodbye. Maybe I’m not better. Just tired of pretending. Fifteen years I spent hiding, living so cautiously I might as well not have lived at all. I thought if I became invisible enough, it wouldn’t hurt when no one looked. But now I see it: No one's looking. Not really. They’re caught in the hum - faces lit by screens, minds dragged along by headlines, algorithms, urgencies that mean nothing when the world goes quiet. And I don’t want to be them. I never was. So what was I hiding from? Not them. Maybe just from the part of me that believed I had to earn belonging, to twist myself into shapes too small to hold a soul. I always tell myself I'm a people-pleaser, a labrador in a crowd, always wagging, always watching. But maybe I just wanted connection. Maybe I was trying to make sure everyone on the bus had a seat. And maybe that’s not so bad. I no longer look up to success. I look for faces in the street at how someone treats the waiter, the ********** crying on the curb, the man with cardboard for shoes. We are all human. All breakable. All still learning how to love without masks. And I want to shout it, before greed drowns our voices, before we forget how to hold one another without asking what they own.
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Jul 2, 2025
Jul 2, 2025 at 2:43 PM UTC
No one’s looking
I used to look up to success. Glossy and distant, like yachts pulling into sunlit harbors. While my brothers and I posed, thinking cool was something you wore. A picture snapped becomes a prophecy one we’re sold before we understand we're being trained to consume. We watched the boats drift in like kings returning from invisible wars. And my brother, bold, naïve, beautiful, pointed and said, “I’ll have one of those.” When asked how he’d pay, he simply explained: “I’ll get it from that wall, just like you do.” God, the way children believe - no fear in their hunger, no shame in their dreams. Maybe I’m just older now, my lenses fogged from wear. But all I see is people wrapped in things not selves, not stories, but trinkets, masks, trophies. Like they forgot that real wealth was once built on time, on tending soil, on tears held back while saying goodbye. Maybe I’m not better. Just tired of pretending. Fifteen years I spent hiding, living so cautiously I might as well not have lived at all. I thought if I became invisible enough, it wouldn’t hurt when no one looked. But now I see it: No one's looking. Not really. They’re caught in the hum - faces lit by screens, minds dragged along by headlines, algorithms, urgencies that mean nothing when the world goes quiet. And I don’t want to be them. I never was. So what was I hiding from? Not them. Maybe just from the part of me that believed I had to earn belonging, to twist myself into shapes too small to hold a soul. I always tell myself I'm a people-pleaser, a labrador in a crowd, always wagging, always watching. But maybe I just wanted connection. Maybe I was trying to make sure everyone on the bus had a seat. And maybe that’s not so bad. I no longer look up to success. I look for faces in the street at how someone treats the waiter, the ********** crying on the curb, the man with cardboard for shoes. We are all human. All breakable. All still learning how to love without masks. And I want to shout it, before greed drowns our voices, before we forget how to hold one another without asking what they own.
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