But yes, it makes sense when you match them together. But then you also talk about this part, how the waves once wrote like unanswered prayer. And I feel like this is the line of the poem that I'm also getting.
Yeah, I think this was when I got a bit of, possibly, a bit of understanding from the piece here, with rising like unanswered prayer. And I feel like the image I was getting from it is so specific. You know, that experience of us being in crisis, and you feel like you want to cry out.
I always feel like that when I'm in crisis. I just want to cry. I'm not seeking solution.
And I don't like anybody offering me solution when I'm in crisis. I just want to be more about it. Then maybe you can offer solutions later.
Yes. So I am getting that experience where probably I'm in crisis, and then I'm crying out. And then nothing is responding.
You know, it goes unanswered, you know. And one minute, sorry, let me also get to the last part of the piece, with like unanswered prayer, how the wind brews the sky with its coherence. Yeah.
So I also feel also there is that desperation of the spirit that we are also trying to create, which is very original and devastating. Like sometimes, our spirit has this way of feeling entirely devastating at the same time, but things are going to be fine at the end of the day. I don't know if I'm interpreting your piece well, but I feel like this is the feeling that I'm getting from the piece.
And I feel like there was also a part where you said, I'm fragile as foam. A lot of vulnerability happened here. Like you are at your most vulnerable here, because you are describing yourself to be a byproduct of violence.
I'm trying to follow the piece line by line, but you're still going to tell me what inspired the piece. Because I don't know why it's so difficult for me to connect my ideas to the piece here, but I will try. You are still trying to be vulnerable here and also describe yourself as a byproduct, structureless, momentary.