Between the Quiet and the Infinite
Where Silence Learns to Speak

There is a room inside the ribcage
where no footsteps echo,
where even memory removes its shoes
before entering.
It is built of unanswered questions
and windows that open inward.
Light does not fall there—
it blooms,
slow as forgiveness.
In that room
I have met the versions of myself
I abandoned at crossroads—
the child who swallowed thunder,
the dreamer who mistook distance for destiny,
the weary pilgrim counting stars
as if they were debts.
They do not accuse.
They hand me mirrors
polished with regret and wonder.
In their glass,
I am both fracture and flame.
Outside, the world sharpens its noise—
sirens of ambition,
the metallic hymn of becoming.
But here,
time kneels.
Silence stretches like a horizon
no map has claimed.
It teaches me the grammar of stillness:
how grief conjugates into grace,
how longing bends into listening,
how fear, when held gently,
unbuttons its armor.
I begin to understand—
the infinite is not a distant sky
but a seed hidden in the marrow,
waiting for the courage
to crack.
And when it does,
the room inside the ribcage
is no longer a room.
It is a doorway,
unlatched by breath,
opening into a field
where every heartbeat
is a star
learning
its own name.


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