Where Dust Remembers
The ordinary dust that keeps our lives from vanishing.

Where Dust Remembers
In the late light, the room
learns how to breathe again—
a slow inhale of floorboards,
an exhale from the curtains’ hem.
Dust climbs the sunbeam
like a steady choir of seeds,
each fleck a biography
that forgot its spine.
I touch the shelf and wake
a small weather—
skin, pollen, city, years—
a storm made gentle enough to keep.
Your photograph—
glass fogged by time and kitchens—
tilts toward the window
as if listening for our names.
On the dresser: a bowl of buttons,
misfit moons in a cracked sky;
the key without a door;
The ticket that never left.
I should clean—
that active forgetting we call care—
But the soft gray layer
He is the only archivist who never lies.
Once, we argued here
about the future’s angles.
Now the future sits folded
in a coat we never wore out.
I stand still until the light
threads me into the air:
salt, paper, laughter, ash—
everything we were,
learning its slow orbit.
If memory is a room,
dust is how it writes—
unhurried, everywhere,
a script you read by moving
through it gently.
When the sun lowers and the beam
steps off the wall,
What’s left is not absence,
but a hush that knows our footsteps
by heart.
I close the door softly,
leave the small weather undisturbed,
and carry your name on my sleeves—
a quiet proof
that the air remembers us, too.
About the Creator
Milan Milic
Hi, I’m Milan. I write about love, fear, money, and everything in between — wherever inspiration goes. My brain doesn’t stick to one genre.



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