Exposing the heart of darkness.

The falling of the sick and wounded, the living dead people, graves open their mouths with groans of dispair, and the living turn their heads away. They had been warned.

The sick feeling was the virus of love grown into a moldy mess. The wish to be someone else and disapear. When the heart is cold and damp a seed germanates.

Paint it bright and then it's better, give it love and even more better. Change the world with brush strokes.

I know this might be hard to take: I will be publishing about the HOLOCAUST till the end of the year. Hope it is medicine, not pain.

She ran up the stairs and fell upon the door which broke to pieces and stood upon the tall hill with blood on her hands looking down upon smaller hills and dafodills.

I believe the hate will mostly end because of how wrong and distasteful it is.

Why is creativity often dark? It is the easiest opening for it. That doesn't make it better. No, it is often second rate work.

The crime against humanity that left a stigma for everyone.

A poet sees a poem as a window which suddenly gets a shaft of light coming at the eyes, and is captured in ink.

There is a big difference between destroying evil and creating good.

Her flaming lips bit into mine and drew blood, she had not any though, neither control nor heart, but cold stone, her eyes icicles, nothing but empty holes, the pain of light that once once, eating at her mind.

Thank You Walmart!

When things go in unexpected ways crazy things happen: The situation has become so dire that Russian soldiers have begun recording videos urging their families never to join the army, warning that doing so would mean certain death. These harsh messages, discovered by Ukrainians on the phones of fallen Russian troops, reveal the desperation of those who sent these recordings to their relatives just before being forced again into suicidal assaults. Overall, the culmination of several key factors has created a scenario where Russian attempts to retake the Kursk region are met with increasingly high costs and diminishing returns. Rather than adjusting their tactics to account for the harsh realities on the ground, Russian commanders appear locked into a pattern of brute-force assaults, relying on sheer numbers to compensate for a lack of strategy. This approach not only exacerbates their losses but also highlights the limits of their operational effectiveness in the face of adverse weather and resilient opposition. The ongoing campaign in Kursk thus stands as a grim testament to the flaws in Russia's military strategy.