A touch of time — feels like marigold marmalade, like spending slow summers together. Syrup-dripping tears sting as they stick to your face, attracting bees; and those jarring truths of a dream unfulfilled. It stays sealed in glass—sweetness postponed, a closed jar never tasted.
You plant a flower of hope in the smallest of gardens, and prove that even a drop of nectar can fertilize your faith. You want to rest in blessings, but blessings move — so must you.
You pray for daily bread, but life kneads your hands into making it. You earn your piece, then spread it like marigold marmalade on warm bread.
Because life isn’t so sweet; dreams only taste a little once you finally get a bite. And Lord, could we be forgiven for craving the fruit of another’s labour? As we mistake living for pleasing — and forget to live for our destined reason.