Today the weather mirrored me— gray thoughts hung low, heavy and wide. I lay in bed, heard leaves brush secrets, heard the wind howl what I hide.
I peeked through blinds, saw flooded walks, rain pouring like it never ends. A world soaked through in quiet grief, no rush to break, no need to mend.
I stepped outside—my shoes went dark, each step a soft and sinking sigh. My hair, once dried from morning’s rinse, now clung like truths I brushed aside.
Cold traced fingers down my neck, the air was sharp, the silence loud. But somehow, soaked and shivering, it felt like standing in a crowd.
It hasn’t rained in far too long— just like I haven’t cried for days. But now the sky and I agree: we flood in our own sacred ways.