In a quiet valley upstate, three boys ruled a kingdom no one else could see. Big Wheels and vacant lots. Crayfish and cardboard swords. Drive-ins and rotary phones. The Lords of Stanford Drive is a suburban epic about friendship, freedom, and the strange elasticity of childhood time — how it once stood still, then slowly crept, then suddenly caught up. A myth of a street. A memory of an era. A crown worn lightly, and laid down without ceremony.
Monthly Archives: February 2026
The Asymptotic Life
Time is not the tyrant we think it is. In dreams it bends. In trauma it fractures. And at the edge of life, it may stretch toward something that feels infinite. The Asymptotic Life explores the elastic nature of perception and the possibility that eternity isn’t a destination, but a limit we are always approaching.
Outside the Raging Fire
A meditation on distance, desire, and endurance. Outside the Raging Fire traces the human condition through elemental forces, memory, and restraint. This poem explores what it means to observe rather than burn, to persist without surrender, and to stand just beyond the heat where clarity, loss, and meaning quietly coexist
They’re Derogative
A satirical lyrical inversion of My Prerogative, reframing autonomy without accountability as performance, denial, and spectacle. When power insists on being left alone, language bends to justify it. This is that bend, set to a familiar rhythm.
An Unmeasured Life
What if aging is not merely biological, but perceptual.
What if time tightens its grip only once we begin to count it.
An Unmeasured Life explores the uneasy intersection of quantum observation, human awareness, and mortality. It considers whether our fear lies not in death itself, but in the act of witnessing our own erosion in increments. A meditation on measurement, inevitability, and the quiet cost of knowing too much, too soon.
Call of the Void
Call of the Void is an acknowledgment of a strange, universal moment: standing at the edge of immensity and feeling the mind briefly test the boundary between presence and absence. Not despair, not desire—but awareness. The vastness doesn’t persuade; it humbles. This piece explores l’appel du vide as a rational, fleeting confrontation with scale, insignificance, and freedom—listening to the void without obeying it.