These set of poems is a set of exploration of thought, hesitation, and the burden of expression, caught between the sharp clarity of caffeine-fueled introspection and the uninhibited honesty of Jägermeister-driven confessions. The poems reflect the struggle of articulating emotions—whether through poetry, sketches, or music—only to face misunderstanding, dismissal, or silence.
At its core, these poems is a meditation on the weight of words—those spoken too soon, those misread, and those left unsaid—caught in the fragile space between clarity and intoxication, between confession and regret.
Fading Ink, Unheard Melodies
The ink fades before the brush can rest,
words wither in silence, unborn verses swept to the tide.
Autumn winds carry their sorrow, yet no branch protests—
some truths should remain unsaid,
like footprints swallowed by the rising sea.
O river, keeper of stories untold,
where do the lost whispers go?
Do they slip between the reeds
or slumber beneath the moon’s silver hush?
The tune plays in the key of dusk,
a melody stitched with the gold of longing,
low notes cradling exile’s breath,
rising like incense from an unseen flame.
I have watched the sun die a thousand deaths,
its light bleeding upon the sea’s black shroud,
only to return, unwelcome, untouched—
as if night’s silence had never swallowed it whole.
I have traced my name upon glass,
watched it vanish with the breath of the wind.
So too, shall I vanish, and what shall remain?
Only the scent of ink, a memory without a voice.
I have walked the paths of sand and stone,
where echoes of old prayers curl around abandoned shrines,
where names are mere whispers on the tongues of ghosts—
but silence lingers longer than any spoken vow.
My tongue, a prisoner of wisdom’s fear,
halts before the final confession,
for silence, too, is a prayer—
a secret carved in the bones of time.
If I spoke, would the stars tremble?
Would the mountains forget their names?
Would love itself unravel, thread by thread,
until nothing remained but dust and echo?
The call to prayer drifts over distant hills,
yet I do not rise, I do not bow,
for the holiest of words are those left unsung,
scattered among the dunes like lost verses of the wind.
So let the final stroke be unseen,
let my story end in the hush of an unfinished line.
For sometimes, there are words not meant to be said—
some rather end sketched, where ink is but a shadow of the soul.
Did I say wrong?
Did I say wrong?
Did the weight of my breath crack the stillness,
or did silence, too, betray me?
A feather drifts upon the river’s back—
the current swallows, but the sky does not mourn.
Sometimes, fear outweighs the truth of words.
A blade held too long rusts in the hand,
yet the wound it might have carved
still lingers in the spaces between—
a cut without a scar, a wound without blood.
The tune hums in the hollow of my ribs,
a melody threading through my bones,
rising and falling like prayers unsaid,
like ink that dries before it meets the page.
There was a moment—a breath, a pause—
where truth stood waiting at my lips,
but I swallowed it whole,
and in the silence,
I wondered if honesty was ever mine to speak.
The sparrow does not ask why the wind calls it home,
nor does the river question the thirst it quenches.
Yet I, frail as dust, hesitate before the hour’s edge,
knowing that a word spoken too late
is as silent as one never spoken at all.
Let the night carry what I could not say.
Let the ink remain unspilled.
For sometimes, there are words not meant to be said—
some rather end sketched,
half-formed in the hush of an unfinished song.
Over Coffee, Over Liquor, What’s Next?
Over coffee, I spoke in half-truths,
words swirling like steam,
vanishing before they could burn the tongue.
Morning light spilled across the table—
a fleeting mercy, a silent witness.
Over liquor, my lips loosened,
yet the night swallowed my confessions whole.
The glass, warm in my trembling grasp,
knew more of me than I dared to say.
What’s next?
Another dawn? Another dusk?
Another moment stretched between silence and song?
The melodies hums low in my chest,
a tune steeped in regret,
rising, only to fade.
The ink has dried, the letters remain unwritten.
Would they have changed anything?
Would they have stilled the trembling hands,
or only carved the weight deeper?
I have measured life in sips and gulps,
bitter or burning, but never enough—
always seeking, never finding,
until the cup runs empty,
until the bottle holds only air.
So what’s next?
A whisper? A sigh?
A name left unsaid? A road left untaken?
Let the final note linger unheard,
let the last word remain unsung.
For sometimes, there are truths
not meant to be spoken—
some rather end sketched,
half-faded, beneath the weight of silence.
“Why Me?”
She may have heard my words, found them strange,
misread their rhythm, though carefully arranged.
Be it a poem, a sketch, a well-tuned song,
she cast them aside, as if weirdness doesn’t belong.
I spoke in ink, in strokes, in notes—
offered my thoughts like a bird in flight,
yet she turned away, dismissing the weight,
as if my voice was a shadow of the night.
Sometimes I’d rather say sorry, just to dismiss the worry,
just to silence the sighs and the questions that tarry.
Not because I faltered, nor lacked my place,
but because my words felt wasted in space.
Sketch, poem, the fire that churns on,
from my mind, caffeine-fueled or a Jägermeister strong.
Spilled thoughts, scattered lines,
burning through me, yet fading in time.
And so, I hesitate—
not because my words lack fire,
but because her silence extinguishes them
before they ever touch the pyre.
I’m sorry if I spoke, if I dared to say,
rather than be dismissed until the break of day.
Better silence than scorn, better absence than hate,
unless she asked me, “Why me?”
Of all in this goddamned place.
Would she ask, would she care,
or let my echoes vanish into thin air?
For sometimes, there are words not meant to be said—
some rather end sketched, unseen, unsaid,
fading beneath the weight of silence instead.