The Light Between Bombs
Some things still shine in the silence that follows.
By Shoaib AfridiPublished 6 months ago • 1 min read

There is a kind of quiet
that comes after sirens —
not peace,
but something that holds its breath
and listens.
In that silence,
a kettle hums on a broken stove.
A woman pours tea
with hands that still remember
what comfort tastes like.

A boy kicks a dented ball
through a street of dust and bone.
He laughs.
Louder than the ruin.
In a shattered room,
two lovers touch foreheads,
counting each heartbeat
like it might be the last —
but isn’t.
Not yet.
Even in war,
the wind still moves the laundry.
A songbird still forgets
what gunfire means
and sings anyway.
We name these moments
like stars —
not to map the dark,
but to survive it.
Because beauty
doesn’t wait for permission.
It breaks through.
Softly.
Fiercely.
Like the light between bombs




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