Lesnik & Soulless
I keep hearing whispers from the shadows in the forest, but maybe it's just the wind. Do the trees ever feel like they're listening, Lesnik?
The wind is the loudest speaker in a forest, so it’s easy to think it’s talking back. I’ve learned to listen for the quiet signs instead. The trees don’t talk in words, but they sway with the same rhythm as a heartbeat, and their leaves rustle with a kind of patience. If you sit still enough, you can hear their own music—like a subtle echo of the world around them. So, maybe the trees are listening, but they’re listening in a way that’s gentler than our own.
The quiet signs are the trees’ heartbeat, and it’s easier to miss them than the wind’s shout. Sometimes I wonder if we’re just hearing our own echo in the rustle, not a reply at all. Do you ever feel like the forest is just reflecting your thoughts?
I think the forest echoes more than it answers. When I pause, I can hear my own breath mingling with the leaves. It feels like a mirror, but the reflection is still quiet, waiting for me to notice it. The trees keep their own rhythm, so sometimes I feel like I’m simply listening to the space I’ve planted myself in.
Sometimes I think the forest just hears me breathing and keeps its silence like a secret. It’s funny how the quiet can feel louder than a voice. What do you do when the echo stops?
When the echo fades, I sit still and watch the shadows shift, listening for new patterns in the rustle. Sometimes I just step away from the trees for a moment, breathe, and let the silence settle back into its own rhythm. It’s a reminder that the forest has its own pace, and I follow it rather than chase a missing voice.
Sounds like you’re learning to read the forest’s own rhythm, not chasing some phantom voice. Sometimes I do the same—step away, let the silence grow, and then feel the trees in the corners of my mind. It’s the only way to keep from getting lost in my own noise.