We house a soul from time to time, but often find our corridors left empty.
No house can stay full forever, lest those filled with zany dreamers who seek thrill beyond their own four walls.
Souls do travel from time to time, like old visitors who leave tips on the breakfast table of their favorite inn, shortly before seeing themselves off.
Souls may stand on our back porch while they torch a cigarette and quietly ponder on minute, existential mysteries.
Souls may seek comfort sprawled at our fireplace or perched atop a kitchen bar stool, seeking to feel the comforting complacency of domesticity.
A soul may find that cozy comforts are ever elusive, exceptional to an existence in which the most stupendous feel bewildered and insignificant.
Alas, such is the nature of a soul: from time to time, a soul might not recognize its own might.
A soul will fight to find a home and seek comfort from its peers, but a soul does not often hear the invitation to call a place one's own. . .
Home.
We are not souls, we house them and from time to time, if we are lucky, our houses open their doors for more than just one stray soul to invite himself in.
If your home can house many it houses the greatest of things, above all else: Love.