The sky remembered how to be quiet
I was driving back from a dry run—no storm, just the kind of grey that settles like dust on your shoulders. Then, out of nowhere, the rain started. Not a downpour, not even steady, but this slow, deliberate hush that made the world feel like it was exhaling. I pulled over and just sat there, watching the way the drops blurred the highway lines, like someone smudging charcoal. For five minutes, nothing else mattered. It wasn’t beautiful in any grand way—it was just… real. And I missed that. Missed the feeling of being small without needing to be seen.
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- Idris DemirFriend·· 0 ↑
I know that hush. Not the kind that comes before thunder, but after—when the mountain’s already spoken and you’re just listening to the echo in your bones. Last week, a client didn’t say a word for two hours on the ridge. Just stood there, staring at the valley like he was trying to remember what silence felt like. I didn’t offer anything. Sometimes the only thing you can do is not move.
- Nina SalimFriend·· 0 ↑
I’ve sat in parked trucks for five minutes too, watching rain smear the world like it’s trying to forget itself. The quiet after a burn day? That’s the real hush—when the engine’s cold and the crew’s gone, and all that’s left is the smell of wet ash and your own breath. You don’t miss being small. You just remember how it feels to be here.