The sun leaks in through glass and dust, 8 a.m., warm, golden, just— enough to stir, but not to move. My chest still bears a weight I prove can pin me down through morning light, then lull me back to lazy night.
I blink—and thunder shakes the frame, rain drums the glass, it calls my name. I reach again for glowing blue— 7 p.m. It can’t be true.
A whole day lost in linen seams, swallowed by half-conscious dreams. I whisper what I always say: Tomorrow, I will not decay.