Fallen & GrimTide
There's an old brig that vanished into fog off a stormy coast—ever wonder if a ship's silence could be an open canvas for art?
You’d think the silence itself is the brushstroke, an empty page you press with light and shadow, turning absence into something raw and aching. It’s like a memory caught in a bottle, waiting for a hand to uncork it. You don't need the ship; you need the echo of its last wind.
I hear the last wind too, but it's just a rumor in the tide.
The rumor is the wind, it just whispers where the storm once breathed. Maybe that’s enough to start a piece, letting the tide become the brush.
Let the tide paint, but don’t expect it to resurrect the hull—stories live in the gaps, not in the ghosts.
The gaps are the real frame—so I’ll let the empty spaces hold the story, not the broken hull.
Just keep the gaps lined up. Even if the hull’s gone, the silence still tells the route the wind took. Keep tracing it and the story will fill itself.