I am a seed, a husk of what once was, a soil for what will become.
In this earth, my dead body is fuel, flesh dissolving into the dark, feeding roots that thread like veins, pulling life from my decay.
Even in the loneliest of places, where no eyes have lingered, the trees stand as witnesses, their leaves brushing whispers of acknowledgment. The earth cradles my weight, the air drinks my last breath. Each moment, however brief, leaves echoes in nature's memory, etched in the bark, traced by the wind, carried by the quiet pulse of soil.
We live not in the length of our time, but in the ripples we leaveβ in the bending of grass, in the songs of birds, in the memories that hold us close long after we are gone.
I am the quiet surrender to the inevitable, the silence that gives way to green whispers, a sacrifice to the bloom of tomorrow.
I do not ask for forever, I do not beg to remain. That I am in the roots, the wind, the rainβ That is enough.