If you only had 100 words a day,
youâd stop saying âfine.â
Youâd stop saying ânothingâs wrong.â
Youâd stop saying things that fill the space
just because silence scares you.
Youâd learn that small talk is expensive.
And that some people never deserved
whole sentences in the first place.
Youâd count syllables like currency.
Youâd breathe before you spoke.
And god, your voice would feel sacred again.
âI love youâ would cost 3.
But if you said it slowâ
with your eyes, with your hands,
with the tremble in your lip
when they started to leaveâ
maybe that would count for more.
Maybe youâd say it once,
just before bed,
and it would echo all night
inside their bones.
Maybe theyâd dream in your voice.
If you only had 100 words a day,
youâd start to listen differently.
Not just to peopleâ
but to birds,
and door hinges,
and the way your name sounds
when they say it without flinching.
Youâd notice the weight of things.
Not everything that wants to be said
deserves to be spoken.
Youâd let some truths sit on your tongue
until they softened.
Youâd leave space for mystery.
Let them wonder what you almost said.
Make eye contact that makes them ache.
Youâd become unbearable in the best wayâ
a person people lean into.
And when you finally spoke,
theyâd shut up.
Because your words
would taste like gold in a famine.
Youâd write more letters.
Youâd start them with:
âI donât want to waste this.â
And end them with:
âHereâs what I saved just for you.â
Youâd circle back to old memories
just to reword them better.
Make sure they landed this time.
Make sure the younger you
felt heard.
Youâd whisper more.
Whispers feel heavier when theyâre rare.
Youâd kiss more.
Kissing is what we do
when we run out of things to say.
Youâd hum the words you couldnât afford.
Dance the things you didnât dare voice.
Youâd speak with your eyes.
Your hands.
Your breath.
The way you stayed.
Youâd realize how often you used to talk
just to be liked.
To fill the room.
To prove you were smart or worthy
or wanted.
Youâd let that version of you die.
Let them talk themselves in circles
while you sit still
and say nothing
but mean everything.
And when someone says,
âSay somethingâŠâ
youâd pause.
Hold their face.
And use 7 words that ruin them for life:
âNo one has ever seen you like this.â
Some people talk in poems.
Not the rhyming kind.
The kind where one line
makes your chest feel too small.
There was oneâ
a girl, a boy, a voice you barely rememberâ
who once said they had the first sentence of a novel
and were just waiting for the ending.
They swore their words would outlive them.
Said they wanted to leave something behind
that could breathe
when they couldnât.
But endings donât always wait.
And the last thing they ever said
was just one word:
âWait.â
No one said anything back.
If you only had 100 words a day,
youâd stop saving them for tomorrow.
You donât know which goodbye will be your last.
And silence never says it quite right.
They wouldnât just listen.
Theyâd wait in your silence like it was gospel.
Like your next word might resurrect them.
// Scorpio Veil
If it moved you,
you already know what to do