Time drips like water through cupped hands,
each second a small death
we cannot hold.
The clock face stares with hollow eyes,
counting down what we pretend
is infinite—
this borrowed breath,
this temporary warmth
beneath our skin.
In hospital corridors,
fluorescent lights hum lullabies
for the sleepless,
while somewhere a heart
forgets its rhythm,
stops mid-beat
like a song
cut short.
We are all walking
toward the same door,
carrying our small griefs
like stones in our pockets,
heavy with the knowledge
that morning
may not come
for everyone.
The earth keeps turning,
indifferent to our names,
our dreams scattered
like autumn leaves—
beautiful in their falling,
brief in their glory
