The clock spits hours like broken teeth and the walls sweat memories I never asked for. Outside, the sky is drunk— staggering between night and neon, while dogs bark at shadows that aren’t even there. I laugh into my glass of whiskey, because what else can you do when life hands you a fistful of nothing wrapped in yesterday’s bad news?
The neighbor’s kid screams like a siren while his mother chain-smokes apologies to the universe through the cracks in her window. There’s a man down the street who argues with God every morning like they’re old enemies playing cards. He always loses, but he plays again anyway.
I’m not crazy— I’m just tuned into a frequency no one else wants to hear. Static and sirens. The hum of dead stars collapsing quietly. The sound of a world that doesn’t even know it’s burning.
I haven’t slept in days. I keep chasing my thoughts like a dog chasing its own tail, round and round, until they collapse in a pile of exhaustion and I sit there, staring at the ashtray, wondering why my heart feels like a busted vending machine spitting out all the wrong things.
They call me a lunatic because I see the cracks in their perfect porcelain smiles— because I know their gods wear suits and their saints sell lies. Because I walk barefoot on the jagged edge of this world and I don’t care if I bleed.
So I howl at the moon, dance with my demons, and kiss the chaos on its lips. I scribble madness on the walls, make love to the mess, and call it life. Because maybe lunacy is the only sane thing left.