it makes no sense
to someone like me
when they say that
the pull of the moon
at its fullest
can make people
behave strangely
differently
erratically
seemingly
out of nowhere;
whether at its fullest
or as a mere slither
in the night sky
the actual moon
remains ever-present
and unchanged
in both mass and
gravitational pull
the effects of which
must remain
largely the same
regardless of how much
is visible and illuminated
on any given night
Mar 9
Mar 9, 2026 at 10:46 AM UTC
it makes no sense
to someone like me
when they say that
the pull of the moon
at its fullest
can make people
behave strangely
differently
erratically
seemingly
out of nowhere;
whether at its fullest
or as a mere slither
in the night sky
the actual moon
remains ever-present
and unchanged
in both mass and
gravitational pull
the effects of which
must remain
largely the same
regardless of how much
is visible and illuminated
on any given night
