Step in— my mind is an ocean not blue—but a bleeding iridescence of molten violets, rusted golds, and bruised, unraveling ceruleans— a palette spilled by a god having a dream.
You’ll see thoughts float here like jellyfish lanterns, soft, slow—laced in venom or velvet— depending on how you look.
The sky never ends in here. It folds like cracked parchment, stretched over the aching arch of my imagination’s bones.
There are trees made of bone-white whispers and flowers with petals like flame-licked lace. They bloom to the rhythm of my pulse when I’m panicking, and wilt under the weight of a silence I can’t swallow.
There’s a path— etched in the ink of dreams I didn’t chase— it winds through forests of regret-shaped branches that scratch and caress all at once.
If you look to the left— you’ll see a lake made of every word I’ve never said. It shimmers, but only under the moon of someone else’s approval.
Birds here don’t fly, they unravel. Each feather a fractured metaphor, each call a dirge sewn with sunlight.
I hide in corners lit by memory— a field of crooked constellations, each one a version of me you’ll never meet, but will almost understand.
If you stay too long, you’ll forget your name, start to speak in echoes, and dream in static. But maybe that’s the point. Maybe that’s the way to really see me.