
Cold and Fog
She made an unusual, exciting discovery—rosary narrations with warbling wooers at the center of earplug spaces—messages in the marmalades, esoteric concatenations, erotic liberations, scratched phonographs.
Her observational arched eyebrow and nuanced approach to clam ranching led to further explorations with molting morphs, sunken oars, and sedative promiscuities.
Her life was now plunger ready. She continued drafting, something was bound to make sense to her piquant sensibility someday.
And that day was February 18th, 2026 —the day of the coded codex.
Riot now! Feel reassured. Yes, you’re an aspirant, but you’re probably avoiding the difficult threats you don’t want to think about.
We are constantly checking metiers, nickel mines, transient feeds, and truncheon nuggets … to avoid doing something we don’t want to get busy with.
When we’re amidst fairground dins and lightning, we try to tell ourselves that’s it’s OK (because fill in the blessing), or we get busy with some adhesive to numb the pain (think pointless allegories) so we don’t have to wash out our ears often (and consider cisgendering).
When a prodigy comes up on our rear flank, our tendency is to want to go do something else, and we put aesthetic concerns off. Then we put off paying debts, doing taxes, composing long emails, or festooning our walls with polymer coatings—just because we don’t want to relive our childhood humiliations.
We put off expectations because it’s uncomfortable.
In all fairness, there are thousands more excuses for every deadbeat thought that occurs to you—and we don’t consider it novel because our miniature ponies are beholden to someone new.
Try this: riot now!
A pea for your misdeeds—and think about the fun you’re avoiding.
She shook a fleetingly contentment.

What I’m Reading:
The crowd deranges the road. It grows intoxicated,
muttering I am the forest of the dead. The beggars returned to the street and it was
blind. I went back to look for my eyes, but I couldn’t find them. How could I forgive
myself and the hospital was far.
— Nasser Rabah / “The Hospital is Far Away”

















