

Broken Wings
Love feels like a butterfly
at first.
Lands soft. Stays longer than you expect.
Warm against your skin,
like it belongs there.
Like it chose you.
You hold still.
Afraid to move,
afraid it’ll leave.
But butterflies don’t stay.
Love shifts.
Pulls away.
You tighten your grip.
Not hard.
Just enough to keep it.
But enough is too much.
The wings fold wrong.
It stops moving.
You didn’t mean to hurt it.
But meaning never mattered.
Wall of Truth
The wall was beige. Not because anyone liked beige, but because it hid things. Beige didn’t argue. It sat quiet, pretending the block south didn’t exist—the one with boarded windows and sagging porches. The wall was the line. Cross it, and you didn’t belong.
Then the red showed up. Smears, like kids’ drawings, faces barely faces, eyes like thumbprints. And the hands. Always the hands. Reaching, clawing, like they wanted to pull the wall down brick by brick. The city hated the hands. They painted over them fast, thick coats, like that’d make it go away. It didn’t.
The guy who did it? No one knew. Showed up after midnight, a spray can and a grudge. Every time they wiped him clean, he came back louder. Words this time. “THE WALL KEEPS NOTHING OUT.” Ugly truth, right there in block letters.
They hated him for it. Feared him, really. Not him—what he showed them. He feared them, too. Feared the day they’d bury him under fresh coats and he’d fade like everything else.
But tonight, he painted. A mother and child, hands outstretched across an empty gap. Tomorrow, the city would scrub it clean. But for tonight, the wall told the truth: there’s no line. There never was.
Compulsive Unraveling
It starts with a line—
half-heard, half-felt,
like a song stuck in your teeth.
You write it down,
just to shut it up.
But the line pulls another,
then another,
like thread yanked from a sweater
you didn’t mean to ruin.
Now it’s a hole,
and you’re picking at it
because what else are you supposed to do?
Before long, you’re knee-deep
in metaphors that don’t quite land,
chasing some truth
that slips sideways every time you blink.
You call it poetry.
It calls you restless.
You write until your brain
feels scraped clean,
like maybe you’ve won
or at least outrun the worst of it.
But quiet never lasts.
Another line hums,
and you’re back at it—
pulling, unraveling,
telling yourself it’s fine,
you’ll patch it up later.
his touch
His hands used to sit at the curve of my waist
Pulling me closer
lingering near the edge of my spine
and in the good moments it was sweet
and in the others it was a cage
when his touch felt like possession
and I stopped knowing who I was
it is a different kind of death to lose yourself
when the memory of his touch is imprinted on your skin
a type of wound that will never bleed
but still tugs at your heartstrings
Existential Crisis
My world was destroyed.
I was lost in the blast.
I was split between my present
and my sordid past.
Skeletons were dancing
out of my closet, into view
and one of those skeletons
happened to be you.
I found myself fractured,
lost in a vortex,
scrambling to find myself
in the jumbled mess,
flailing and searching,
spinning and falling,
and I was screaming for insight,
fighting and clawing.
I just wanted to know what I am
when I’m too old to be a bachelor
and too young to be
a lonely old man.
I thought maybe you could show me
when I found myself in you
but it was all an illusion.
I didn’t fit the shoe,
so now here I am drowning
in an existential sea
where there is no existence.
There is no me.
The Art of Being Dead
Being dead isn't nearly as boring as you might think.
I discovered this on my third day of non-existence, when I finally stopped trying to open doors and learned to simply pass through them instead. The trick, I found, is to forget you were ever solid to begin with. Forget the weight of bones and blood, the constant pull of gravity, the way air once caught in your lungs. Remember instead that you are now made of the same stuff as moonlight and memory.
My name was – is? – Thomas Webb, and I've been dead for approximately eight months, two weeks, and five days. Not that time means much anymore. When you're dead, moments can stretch like taffy or snap past like rubber bands. Sometimes I watch the sun rise and set so quickly it looks like someone's flicking a light switch. Other times, I spend what feels like hours watching a single dewdrop slide down a blade of grass.
I haunt (though I prefer the term "reside in") a small town in New England called Millbrook. Not because I'm bound here by unfinished business or ancient curses – at least, I don't think so. I simply never felt the pull to go elsewhere. Even when I was alive, I rarely left town. Why start traveling now?
Besides, there's more than enough to keep me occupied here. Take Mrs. Henderson at number forty-two, for instance. She's been stealing her neighbor's newspapers for three years, but only on Wednesdays, and only if it's raining. I spent two months following her around before I figured out why: she lines her parakeet's cage with newspaper, and she's convinced that newspaper stolen in the rain brings good luck to pets. I can't argue with her results – that parakeet is seventeen years old and still singing.
Then there's the teenage boy who sits in the park every Tuesday afternoon, writing poetry in a battered notebook. He thinks no one can see him behind the big oak tree, but I float by sometimes and read over his shoulder. His metaphors need work, but his heart's in the right place. Last week he wrote a sonnet comparing his crush's eyes to "pools of Mountain Dew," which was both terrible and oddly touching.
The living can be endlessly entertaining when they don't know they're being watched. It's not creepy if you're dead – it's anthropology.
But I'm not always a passive observer. Sometimes, when I'm feeling particularly solid, I can manage small interactions with the physical world. Nothing dramatic like moving furniture or writing messages in blood on the walls (though I'll admit I tried once, out of curiosity – turns out being dead doesn't automatically make you good at horror movie effects).
Instead, I specialize in tiny interventions: nudging dropped keys into view, generating the perfect cool breeze on a sweltering day, ensuring that the last cookie in the box is chocolate chip instead of oatmeal raisin. Small kindnesses, barely noticeable but precisely timed.
My finest work happens at The Dusty Tome, the bookstore where I used to work when I was alive. My former colleague, Sarah, still runs the place. She never knew that I harbored a decade-long crush on her, and now she never will. But I can still help her in my own way.
I've become quite good at guiding customers to exactly the book they need, even if they don't know they need it. A gentle cold spot near the self-help section, a subtle illumination of a particular spine, a barely perceptible whisper that draws their attention to just the right page. Last week, I helped a grieving widower find a cookbook that contained his late wife's secret cookie recipe. He cried right there in the aisle, clutching the book like a life preserver. Sarah gave him a free bookmark and a cup of tea.
The other ghosts (yes, there are others) think I'm too involved with the living. "You need to learn to let go," says Eleanor, who's been dead since 1847 and spends most of her time rearranging flowers in the cemetery. "The living have their world, and we have ours."
But I've never been good at letting go. Even when I was alive, I held onto things too long – old tickets stubs, expired coupons, unrequited feelings. Death hasn't changed that aspect of my personality. If anything, it's given me more time to cultivate my attachments.
Take my cat, for instance. Mr. Whiskers (I didn't name him – he came with that regrettable moniker from the shelter) is still alive and living with my sister. He can see me, as most animals can, but he's remarkably unfazed by my transparent state. Sometimes I lie on the floor next to him while he sleeps, pretending I can feel his warmth. He purrs anyway, the sound vibrating through whatever passes for my soul these days.
The hardest part about being dead isn't the lack of physical sensation or the inability to enjoy coffee (though I do miss that). It's watching the people you love cope with your absence. My sister still sets an extra place at Christmas dinner. My mother keeps "forgetting" to delete my number from her phone. My father pretends he's okay but visits my grave every Sunday with fresh flowers and updates about the Patriots' latest games, as if I might be keeping score in the afterlife.
I want to tell them I'm still here, that death isn't an ending but a change in perspective. I want to tell my sister that I saw her ace her dissertation defense, that I was there in the back of the room, cheering silently as she fielded every question with brilliant precision. I want to tell my mother that yes, I did get her messages, all of them, and that the cardinal that visits her bird feeder every morning is not me, but I appreciate the thought.
But the rules of death are strict about direct communication. The best I can do is send signs they probably don't recognize: a favorite song on the radio at just the right moment, a unexpected whiff of my cologne in an empty room, the feeling of being hugged when they're alone at night.
Sometimes I wonder if this is hell – not fire and brimstone, but the eternal frustration of being able to observe but never truly connect. Other times, usually when I'm watching Sarah shelve books or listening to my father's one-sided conversations at my grave, I think this might be heaven. The ability to witness life without the messy complications of living it, to love without the fear of loss, to exist in the spaces between moments.
I've developed hobbies, as one does when faced with eternal existence. I collect overheard conversations, storing them like precious gems in whatever serves as my memory now. I've become an expert in the secret lives of squirrels (far more dramatic than you'd expect). I've learned to read upside-down books over people's shoulders on park benches, and I've mastered the art of predicting rain by watching the way cats clean their whiskers.
But my favorite pastime is what I call "emotion painting." I've discovered that strong feelings leave traces in the air, visible only to the dead – streaks of color and light that linger like aurora borealis. Love is usually gold or deep rose, anger burns red with black edges, and sadness flows in shades of blue and silver. I spend hours watching these colors swirl and blend, especially in places where emotions run high: the hospital waiting room, the high school during prom, the small chapel where weddings and funerals alike are held.
Today, I'm following a new pattern of colors I've never seen before – a strange mixture of green and purple that sparkles like static electricity. It's emanating from a young woman sitting alone in The Dusty Tome, reading a worn copy of "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir." She has dark circles under her eyes and a hospital bracelet on her wrist. The colors around her pulse and swirl with an intensity that draws me closer.
As I hover near her table, I realize she's not actually reading. She's crying silently, tears falling onto the open pages. But there's something else – she keeps looking up, scanning the bookstore as if searching for something. Or someone.
Then she speaks, so softly even I almost miss it: "Thomas? Are you here?"
I freeze (metaphorically speaking – I'm always technically frozen now). It's Lisa Chen, a regular customer from my living days. We used to chat about books, particularly ghost stories. She once told me she could sense spirits, but I had dismissed it as whimsy. Now, as I watch the colors dance around her, I wonder if perhaps she was telling the truth.
"I know you're probably here somewhere," she continues, still speaking barely above a whisper. "Sarah told me you used to help people find the right books. I could use some help now."
I drift closer, fascinated by the way the green and purple lights seem to reach out toward me.
"I'm dying," she says matter-of-factly. "Cancer. Stage four. The doctors say I have maybe three months." She laughs softly. "I'm not afraid of being dead, exactly. I just want to know... is it lonely?"
For the first time since my death, I wish desperately that I could speak. I want to tell her about the beauty of emotion paintings, about the secret lives of cats and squirrels, about the way love looks like golden light and how sadness can be as beautiful as stained glass.
Instead, I do what I do best. I create a gentle breeze that ruffles through the nearby shelves until a small, leather-bound book falls onto her table. It's a collection of Mary Oliver poems, opened to "When Death Comes."
Lisa picks up the book with trembling hands and reads aloud: "When death comes like the hungry bear in autumn... when death comes and takes all the bright coins from his purse to buy me, and snaps the purse shut... I want to step through the door full of curiosity, wondering: what is it going to be like, that cottage of darkness?"
The colors around her shift, the purple fading as the green grows brighter, more peaceful. She smiles, touching the page gently.
"Thank you, Thomas," she whispers.
I stay with her until she leaves, watching the colors trail behind her like a comet's tail. Then I do something I've never done before – I follow her. Not to her home or to the hospital, but to all the places in town that still hold beauty: the park where the teenage poet writes his awful, wonderful verses, the bench where the widower sits feeding pigeons, the small garden behind the library where Sarah takes her lunch breaks.
At each stop, I paint the air with every beautiful thing I've seen since dying, every moment of joy and wonder and connection I've witnessed. I don't know if she can see the colors, but I paint them anyway – gold for love, silver for hope, and a new color I've never used before, one that looks like sunlight through leaves, that means "you are not alone."
Being dead isn't what I expected. It's not an ending or a beginning, but a different way of being. A way of loving the world without being able to hold it. A way of touching lives without leaving fingerprints. A way of existing in the spaces between heartbeats, in the pause between words, in the moment before tears become laughter.
And sometimes, if you're very lucky, it's a way of showing someone else that the cottage of darkness isn't dark at all. It's full of colors only the dead can see, but the living can feel.
I think I'll stay in Millbrook a while longer. After all, there are still books to be found, cats to be comforted, and stories to be witnessed. Besides, I've heard there's a new ghost in town – a teacher who's been rearranging the letters on the high school announcement board to spell out poetry at midnight. I should probably introduce myself.
Being dead, I've learned, is just another way of being alive.