Edges of the Head

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  A head is not merely bone and skin, but a chamber of storms, where thought churns like restless seas and colours spill beyond their edges. What can the brain contain? It holds infinities, yet bends beneath routines: the labour of survival, the weight of names, the endless tally of tasks that tether imagination to necessity. Once there was a freedom— a childhood bright with unscripted hues, where colours did not ask permission to scatter, and play was the only labour. But thresholds arrive, drawn by institutions, by timetables, by the slow narrowing of sky into ceiling. Here the child learns to sit, to raise a hand, to speak in sequence, to dream only in sanctioned hours. The head adapts. It absorbs order as it once absorbed wonder, and the saturation of colour dims into function. Yet at the edges, still, the threshold glimmers— a reminder that within the skull’s dark theatre there lingers a pulse of rebellion, a fragment of the child unwilling to be tamed. And perhaps that ...

Memory of Stone

 


Before words, before breath,
There were rocks.
Silent witnesses,
Holding the patience of the cosmos.

Forged in stellar furnaces,
They drifted through voids,
Meteor, mountain, pebble —
Each a fragment of forever.

On Earth they gathered,
Layer upon layer,
Recording the whispers of oceans,
The footsteps of vanished beasts.

Every grain of sand,
Every towering cliff,
Is a page in the autobiography
Of a restless planet.

We, the brief ones,
Walk across their backs,
Carving names that vanish
While they endure.

Touch a stone,
And you touch time itself —
The universe frozen,
Waiting for us to remember.