confederacies.com
Domain For Sale: Price = $50
Registrar : Dynadot
Multiple secure payment options.
The afternoon light slants through the window, golden and tired, and I find myself thinking about the word confederacies. Not the political kind—not the weight of history or the machinery of power—but something smaller, more fragile.
I think of the wildflowers that grew along the fence line when I was seven. Purple loosestrife and Queen Anne's lace, their heads bent together against the wind. They formed a kind of confederacy, didn't they? A silent pact to bloom and fade in the same season, to lean on one another when the summer storms came crashing down.
I think of old friends. The ones who stayed up with me until three in the morning, drinking cheap wine and solving the world's problems from a battered couch. We were a confederacy then—bound not by documents but by laughter and late-night confessions, by the unspoken understanding that we would catch each other when we fell.
Those alliances dissolve, don't they? People move. The phone calls grow shorter, then stop. The wildflowers are gone now, replaced by a parking lot.
But here is what I have learned: every true confederacy leaves a scar. Not a wound—a scar. Something that still feels warm when you touch it. And on certain afternoons, when the light is just right, I can feel them still. All the small, beautiful alliances I have been part of. All the temporary kingdoms of the heart.
They were never meant to last forever. Only long enough to matter.
Domain For Sale: Price = $50
Registrar : Dynadot
Multiple secure payment options.
The afternoon light slants through the window, golden and tired, and I find myself thinking about the word confederacies. Not the political kind—not the weight of history or the machinery of power—but something smaller, more fragile.
I think of the wildflowers that grew along the fence line when I was seven. Purple loosestrife and Queen Anne's lace, their heads bent together against the wind. They formed a kind of confederacy, didn't they? A silent pact to bloom and fade in the same season, to lean on one another when the summer storms came crashing down.
I think of old friends. The ones who stayed up with me until three in the morning, drinking cheap wine and solving the world's problems from a battered couch. We were a confederacy then—bound not by documents but by laughter and late-night confessions, by the unspoken understanding that we would catch each other when we fell.
Those alliances dissolve, don't they? People move. The phone calls grow shorter, then stop. The wildflowers are gone now, replaced by a parking lot.
But here is what I have learned: every true confederacy leaves a scar. Not a wound—a scar. Something that still feels warm when you touch it. And on certain afternoons, when the light is just right, I can feel them still. All the small, beautiful alliances I have been part of. All the temporary kingdoms of the heart.
They were never meant to last forever. Only long enough to matter.