Letters in Silver Light
A midnight confession to the one who never sleeps

Dear Moon,
You always arrive without knocking —
slipping through my curtains like breath,
turning my clutter into constellations.
I should have written sooner.
You’ve watched me rehearse goodbyes
in windows that forgot how to close.
Some nights you look like a bruise,
soft and purple with remembering.
Other nights, you’re sharp as forgiveness,
cutting through every excuse I’ve tried to keep.
Do you remember when I was twelve
and told you I’d never be afraid of the dark?
You laughed — I swear you did —
and the clouds rolled over you
like blankets pulled by tired gods.
Now I’m older, and fear has grown polite.
It knocks, asks if I have a moment.
I offer it tea, sometimes dinner.
You still hang above the mess, patient,
collecting my silences like old letters.
I wonder what you do with them —
all those unmailed things we whisper up.
Do you sort them by ache or apology?
Do you keep them in some silver drawer
where loneliness goes to rest?
Tonight I’m not asking for answers.
Just to know you’re still awake,
still holding this fragile orbit
between what was promised and what remains.
If you can, hum the song
you sang to oceans before language.
I’ll listen. I always do.
— Yours in borrowed light,
The One Still Looking Up
About the Creator
Rai Sohaib
Writing about life’s hidden patterns and the power of the human mind
Writing poetry and poems

Comments (1)
Rai, this poem is marvelous, you expressed each line so well.