A gift called „An Hour“.

For someone like me who’s not regularly travelling by train, it is still a little bit of an adventure. I remember my first conscious train trips as a kid, the wonder and excitement, being able to walk around while You’re travelling, the constant comforting and sullying noise that a train makes, the regular little bumps, the slight cracking of the chassis, the people murmuring around You.

#slowtravel #trainthoughts #stoicism #mindfulness #poetry #poeticprose

“She gave me for my pains a world of sighs.”
― William Shakespeare

#Bot #Quote #Love #PoeticProse #Tragedy

Shaving: A Greenland Diaries Flash Fiction

Nigel couldn’t believe his beard had gotten this long.

It was down to his chest, tangled and frizzy. It was black, but almost brown at its feathery edges. He could hear his father yelling at him to trim it, his high, almost husky voice echoing in his head. His father was ex military. He loved the clean shaven look and forced Nigel to follow that hairless motif, even though Nigel hadn’t picked up a weapon until the Drum started. Now, he always had one with him. The ravaged green world demanded it, even with the Drum destroyed and the Unnamed no longer hunting him at night.

Nigel wondered if his father was still alive in the nursing home in Saint Louis Park. He had barely been alive before the Drum. It wouldn’t make any sense for him to be spared.

Nigel had been lucky to hide in his Golden Valley home for most of the apocalypse. He had left for a few weeks to join survivors fighting an Unnamed by a lake that kept attacking them. It had been a hard fought battle. Only Nigel and a few others survived. None of them had the appetite for further confrontations with the Unnamed, and they all retreated to their former hiding spots. Those had been the last people he’d spoken to, except for a band of soldiers passing through who told him the Drum was destroyed, and the Unnamed were nonviolent unless attacked.

Nigel felt his dark, reflectionless face. His features were gaunt, weathered by a lack of nutritious food. His cheeks were flat, his nose large, his forehead dry. His lips were cracked and bloody in places. The weather had been fine. It was the fear eroding his flesh. The constant worry of the Unnamed returning, or a crazed Reanimated storming through the neighborhood.

Slowly, above his white bathroom sink, he began to trim his beard. There was no electricity for his razor, so he resorted to a pair of orange handled scissors he kept in his office for trimming documents. They were sharp, but loud as they crushed the fibers between its blades. In minutes, most of his beard was reduced to a prickly edge beneath his fingers. He sighed.

“I guess it’s time. They said it was safe.”

Ahead of him hung a wool blanket, yellow and brown, duct taped to the wall in miscellaneous streaks of silver adhesive. It dangled just above the sink.

It blocked the mirror.

He’d put it up during the first week, when he noticed the shadows watching him. Now, with the Drum destroyed, survivors passing through told him mirrors and reflections were back to normal. They no longer held phantoms.

He slowly reached for the fabric, then stopped.

“I can’t do it.”

He walked out of the bathroom with a shrug.

“I can’t believe it’s okay.”

I really enjoy writing about these quieter moments in the Greenland Diaries, where characters are learning to live again after a horrifying ordeal that shook the foundations of humanity. These bits of flash fiction give me ample opportunity for it. You can learn more about the mainline series right here. Thank you for reading!

#author #blogging #bodyHorror #books #cosmicHorror #darkFantasy #darkFiction #decay #fantasy #fiction #flashFiction #grief #hauntedLandscapes #horror #horrorWriting #identity #isolation #liminalSpaces #machines #memory #monsters #obsession #patrickWMarsh #poeticProse #prosePoetry #psychologicalHorror #shortStories #speculativeFiction #survival #teraryHorror #theGreenlandDiaries #transformation #trauma #weirdFiction #writing

About the Series

“It began with a drum. Then the monsters came. I’ve been hiding ever since.” The following collections of journals were recovered from a caravan outside of Duluth, Minnesota. The exact date of reco…

Patrick W. Marsh

I Can’t Leave: A Greenland Diaries Flash Fiction

Rob had memorized the pattern of abandoned cars in the parking lot outside the building. A red van, a blue truck, a few white sedans, silent and sun faded, lay scattered across the velvet sheet of greenery in the basin around the office tower he’d been hiding in. He’d been fixing a boiler in the basement when the Drum began. Most of the building was empty that first night. Everyone had already left for the day. Only a handful were torn apart beneath the Unnamed’s obscene claws.

And then the office was empty.

Except for Rob.

He had always imagined himself different at the end of the world. At six foot five, all elbows and height, with an unkempt beard dropping to his chest and a perpetually worn Minnesota Twins cap, he’d figured he’d look the part. He had thought of himself as stereotypically male, chew, flannels, and a quiet, lumbering confidence. But when the monsters arrived and stalked the hallways, he learned quickly how fragile that image was. Back on his grandfather’s farm, he and his friends in their local anti government militia had joked that if the world ever collapsed, they’d be ready.

But once the Unnamed descended and began mutilating and resurrecting their victims, the only thing Rob grew adept at was hiding.

For someone so tall and broad, sneaking through the office should have been impossible, yet he’d shaped himself to its shadows. He learned to bend beneath desks, wedge between bookshelves, flatten against cubicles. Even when the Reanimated drifted through, he found ways to slip past them, though other survivors told him not to fear them. Those survivors were nothing like him. They weren’t afraid of the shadows. They fought them day and night. He’d heard their skirmishes echoing through the Drum. Even now, with it finally over, the night outside carried only wind, insects, and the soft groan of the building settling.

How were they so brave?

A few survivors had passed through recently and told him he could go home, or even find work with the Reestablishment. But he couldn’t force himself to leave the gray block of the office. Every time he packed his few supplies, slung the rifle he’d taken off a dead soldier, and started toward home, he barely made it a few blocks. A shadow, a rattle of debris, a shift in the wind, anything could spook him, and he’d sprint back to the familiar corners of the office floor.

Day or night didn’t matter.

He just couldn’t leave.

Thank you for reading my flash fiction from the Greenland Diaries. In this story, I wanted to show a character you might expect to be strong because of how they postured their identity, but when the apocalypse appeared they realized it was all an image without integrity. They weren’t actually built for the conflict they thought they were seeking. Monsters are an excellent mirror.

#author #blogging #bodyHorror #books #cosmicHorror #darkFantasy #darkFiction #decay #fantasy #fiction #flashFiction #grief #hauntedLandscapes #horror #horrorWriting #identity #isolation #liminalSpaces #literaryHorror #machines #memory #monsters #obsession #patrickWMarsh #poeticProse #prosePoetry #psychologicalHorror #shortStories #speculativeFiction #survival #theGreenlandDiaries #transformation #trauma #weirdFiction #writing

About the Series

“It began with a drum. Then the monsters came. I’ve been hiding ever since.” The following collections of journals were recovered from a caravan outside of Duluth, Minnesota. The exact date of reco…

Patrick W. Marsh

Sometimes, the most beautiful creations exist only for a moment.
We pour our hearts, our time, our love into them—yet they vanish in the blink of an eye.
And still, in that fleeting existence, they leave us transformed.

From fondant figures to moments in life, true beauty lies not in keeping, but in the courage to create, give, and let go.

SoulfulSundays #ArtOfCreation #Impermanence #ReflectiveWriting #LifeLessons #CreativeJourney #PoeticProse #MindfulMoments

http://treazuredpen.com/2025/10/05/the-reason-behind-it-all/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social

The Reason Behind It All

Hey everyone, happy Sunday!It’s been a while since I picked up my pen. After a short vacation, I tried to write, but nothing came. Maybe because I was still floating in that gentle space of nothing…

TreazuredPen

Some puzzle pieces don’t belong—
Yet they never stop finding their way back.

A soft, aching story about love that never asked to be seen—just felt.

🧩 The Pieces That Didn’t Fit— new on #TreazuredPen

💬 Tap to read. Reflect. Feel.

#PoeticProse #ShortStoryLove #UnspokenConnections #LoveThatDidntFit

http://treazuredpen.com/2025/06/11/%f0%9f%a7%a9-the-pieces-that-didnt-fit/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social

🧩 The Pieces That Didn’t Fit

In a drawer filled with forgotten items, two mismatched puzzle pieces continuously find each other despite never fitting together. Their quiet, unrecognized love faces separation when a mother glue…

TreazuredPen

✨ “I will gather the scope of my becoming, and inspire the hope that keeps others dreaming.”
— my 13-year-old, between a food request and an argument.

We fight, we laugh, we grow.
Somewhere in the mess of everyday, we’re both learning—even when we don’t realise it.

📝 A page from our everyday—now on the blog.
🔗 Read more: Link in bio
#BlogStory #PoeticProse #RealLifePoetry #EverydayStories
#SelfDiscoveryThroughMotherhood #WritingMotherhood #HeartfeltWords

http://myspace20.in/2025/04/05/a-page-from-my-everyday/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social

A Page from My Everyday

The narrative explores a mother’s reflections on her relationship with her son, Ashale, highlighting their kitchen conversations. Through playful debates and thoughtful remarks, she finds hop…

"My Space :
Movements of a Stone by A.L. Hogsett https://link.medium.com/gP9PRDHj0Lb #PoeticProse on The Mad River