Wednesday, December 17, 2025

πŸŸͺThe Invisible Witness | By Roselyn A St Clair & Nomis


 

Intimacy isn’t just about skin—it’s about fear, vulnerability, and mortality. When a man like him confesses a fear of dying alone, you don’t just hear it; you carry it. In the quiet hours, you begin preparing for a moment you hope never comes.

We talk about everything—family, desire, women, sex, fantasies, the world. Nothing is off-limits. But one night, as the room still hummed with the afterglow of our bodies, he grew silent. And then he said it:

“One of my biggest fears… is dying at home. Alone. No one to call for help. No one to even notice I’m gone.”

I remember lying there, unable to speak. I wanted to say something—anything—but I didn’t. Perhaps I was afraid of making the thought too real. Perhaps I felt it wasn’t my place to offer a solution. But that sentence never left me. It nested in my chest.

Months later, in the middle of a wildly passionate night—sheets tangled, hearts racing—he moaned out something that pulled me straight out of the pleasure.

“Oh God… this type of session is going to kill me.”

It was said in jest, I know. But not to me. Not after what he’d shared. When our breathing finally settled, my head resting gently on his chest, I whispered, “I hear your heart beating. It’s almost back to normal.”

Then I asked the question that had been haunting me since that night:

“What if something happens to you while we’re together? What do I do? Who do I call? What is the arrangement? If you are… fully naked and unconscious—what is the move?”

He chuckled at first. 

I didn’t. 

I watched the smile fade from his face as he realized I was serious. He gave me a name—a doctor. I saved it in my phone immediately, a cold, clinical digit in a list of shared secrets.

He apologized then. 

He didn’t mean to scare me. He didn’t mean to joke about the end. But I knew it wasn’t just a joke; it was a weight he carries every night.

And then, the thoughts returned.

Why isn’t she the one there for him? 

Did she stop caring? 

Or did he? 

"They are tied by history and a formal commitment the world recognizes. 

But what does that recognition actually hold? 

A signature on a legal document? A ghost in the hallway of his life?"

His space is a gallery of her image—smiles frozen in silver frames that seem to track my every move with a silent surveillance. 

It is a strange thing to be watched by someone who doesn't even know you exist, yet her gaze feels like a constant question. She isn’t there in the flesh, but she is woven into the architecture of his world—an atmospheric pressure that never quite leaves the room. 

She is the phantom who occupies the walls, while I am the one who holds his heartbeat in the dark.

And if something happened to him… would I even be allowed to mourn? Would I be welcomed at the service? Could anyone be told the truth? Where would I sit?

I would be the last woman to kiss him. To hold him. To hear his breath slow and steady beneath my hand. And I would be invisible.


πŸ”» Reflection

This isn’t just about being someone’s lover. It’s about becoming someone’s witness.

You become the person who sees what the world doesn’t. You know the rituals of his morning; the silence he fills with humming; the way he taps his foot when he’s deep in thought; the way he fears the night.

He fears dying alone. And maybe, I fear loving someone who already belongs to someone else—even if only in name.

I don’t want to be the secret at the funeral. I want to be the woman they describe when they say, “She loved him right to the end.”

But perhaps that’s too much to ask. Maybe that is the silent risk we take when we fall for someone who belongs to another….


Tuesday, December 16, 2025

πŸ’” The Distance Between Us | By Roselyn A St Claire & Herman Kingsley

 

"Technically committed, emotionally searching" isn’t always a flirtation—it’s a quiet confession. And when a person states their status with intention, you learn quickly that what’s available isn’t just their time. It’s his loneliness, his longing… and sometimes, your own heartbreak.



Another week passes. Another weekend without seeing him.

I had told him I wanted time. He agreed—the weekend would be great, he said. But the days came and went, and nothing happened. The silence was louder than ever.

There was a time when my bed missed me. These days, I think it’s tired of me.

I asked him once how often he truly intended to give me my medicine—his sweet code for our time together. Weekly? Biweekly? Monthly? Because let’s be honest: we make time for who we want to be with. And if the frequency is left vague, then the intention is too.

Since I started driving myself to see him, he no longer picks me up. And I realize now—I loved being picked up. I loved the ritual of being carried away to his space and returned in the still morning. It made me feel wanted. Desired. Chosen. But those days are gone. I hate this new version of us.

One night, he played Isaac Hayes—those deep, soulful melodies that wrap around your ribs and squeeze. It made me feel something tender. Comforted. Special.

Another night, he sent me a video of Nelson Mandela’s widow speaking about the man behind the myth. I told him, “I get that. I know that version of you too.”

But then came the weekend again—Friday… Saturday… silence.

To make it worse, I saw an image of his ex-lover that day—tagged in a recent, intimate photo with him on a local professional council’s social media page. The photo was from a function I wasn't at, and his smile in it was wide. The image of them together, and him not reaching out to me? It rattled me.

They share council roles, so I’ve always known they’re still in touch. That’s not the issue. But her tagged there, and me nowhere in his timeline? That was the issue.

She had him for almost a decade. And in the back of my mind, I wonder… Is she still holding on? Is he?

He once told me her body language showed she missed him. I didn’t ask what he did with that information.

I know he doesn’t owe me answers. But I am involved. And if I’m not the only one in this delicate space… I want the dignity of choosing whether to stay or walk away.

Because when we are together, it’s so damn good. The vibe. The conversation. The kisses. The way I feel seen and held in his presence—it’s intoxicating. It makes everything else melt away. In those moments, I don’t share him with anyone.

But those moments are getting further apart. And the questions in my heart are getting louder.


πŸ”» Reflection on the Arrangement

You can’t call something casual when your body knows the difference. You can’t call something simple when your soul is making space for it.

But here’s what they don’t tell you about loving someone who is committed but secretly seeking: You end up standing in the hallway of someone else’s life, hoping they open a door for you. And sometimes, they don’t.

Sunday, December 7, 2025

πŸ’«The Night She Tried to Read My Mind | Between the lyrics, I felt everything she couldn’t say.

By Herman Kingsley & Roselyn A St Claire

It never is planned with her.

One minute, we were two professionals balancing small talk and self-control in the quiet office, and the next, a classic Reggae voice filled the space, cutting through the silence. The melody was smooth, almost teasing: “Oh, I wish, I wish there was a way that I could read your mind…”

I froze.

She didn’t move either. Just stared—not the kind of stare that makes you flinch, but the kind that felt like it could peel your thoughts open. Her eyes held questions I didn’t dare voice, and yet, I wanted her to see every answer.

The air shifted, unprofessional and dangerously intimate. We both felt the boundary dissolve. The song played on, speaking of longing, of curiosity, of desire unspoken. And there we were, suspended in that quiet, charged moment, hearing the music in the space between our heartbeats.

She leaned ever so slightly closer, the faintest brush of her hand against mine. I didn’t pull away. My breath caught; a shiver traced its way down my spine.

I didn’t look away. I let her see that I understood — that I felt it too. Every word the singer couldn’t speak out loud, we shared in that gaze.

Still, silence held us. Sometimes restraint is the truest intimacy — the kind that tingles under your skin and lingers long after the music stops.

There’s a delicate, electric beauty in this. Wanting without touching, needing without words. Perhaps this is the kind of connection that lasts: unspoken, yet undeniably, fundamentally felt.


πŸ’­ Closing Thoughts — 

They call it unspoken desire, like it’s some accidental comfort exchange. But for me, it was more than that. It wasn’t about acting on impulse — it was about feeling alive. ❤️‍πŸ”₯

Some connections don’t need words or boundaries to be understood. That night, she reminded me that intimacy isn’t always action — sometimes it’s recognition, attention, and being seen.

We didn’t plan it. We didn’t name it. We just felt it — and for once, that was enough. πŸŒ™

πŸŸͺThe Invisible Witness | By Roselyn A St Clair & Nomis

  Intimacy isn’t just about skin—it’s about fear, vulnerability, and mortality. When a man like him confesses a fear of dying alone, you don...