Fingertip reaches—rose glass-fractured sky, but the world keeps turning, indifferent, blind. We watch, we wait, we sift through the fallen ashes— searching for warmth in a fire long gone.
Ghosts of wanting drift through the ebb, feet sinking in time’s marrow-thick river. Clawing at the hilltop, slipping, gasping— but do we climb or just fall slower?
Love hums then shatters, echoes down corridors we dare not tread. The oaken river swallows its dead, birds fall southward, wings brittle with regret.
Winter comes for all—darkness too. Light flickers, just out of reach, a mirage for the desperate, the reckless, those who still run, still chase, still bleed.
But what if the answers unravel the mind? What if understanding breaks us instead? What if we lose ourselves, seeking someone else to make us whole?
Is life’s significance just a joke told in passing, laughter drowned in the howl of the void? If misery loves company, why do so many stand alone?
Copyright Malcolm Gladwin March 2025 Wanderers on the Edge