Perforated Silence


I don’t tell people this, because it sounds like a lie when you say it out loud—but the work goes better if I chew while I draw.

Not gum. Never gum. Gum is too clean, too polite. It doesn’t fight back.

I sit at the table long after the street forgets my name. Coffee cooling to something bitter and honest. Paper spread out like a confession I haven’t decided to make yet. The pencil knows my hand better than most people ever did. It hesitates when I hesitate. It presses harder when I pretend I’m fine.

There’s a thin red thread hanging from the corner of my mouth. I don’t think about it. That’s the point. It keeps time. Keeps me anchored. Something to do with the jaw while the rest of me disappears into the lines.

The cat watches.

She always does.

Perched there like a courtroom judge who never bangs the gavel. Yellow eyes. No sympathy. No condemnation either. Just the steady understanding that whatever I’m doing, I’m not done yet. She has a way of watching that feels older than language—like she’s seen this before and knows better than interrupt it.

I draw faces mostly. Not portraits. Faces that look like they’ve survived something and didn’t bother to tell anyone. The kind of faces that would never answer a question straight if you asked them. Sometimes I think I’m drawing myself from a few decades ahead. Sometimes from behind.

People like to talk about money as if it explains everything. As if the numbers can be lined up and the story will behave. But money doesn’t understand why a man stays at a table too long, or why he keeps red licorice within reach like a tool instead of a treat. It doesn’t know what it costs to sit with a blank page until it stops resisting you.

The red thread shortens. I bite. Pull. Chew again. It’s muscle memory now. Same as sharpening the pencil. Same as breathing through the hard parts. Same as not stopping when the lines start to say things I wasn’t planning on admitting.

Each mark seems to multiply the silence. Not louder—deeper. The kind of quiet that stacks on itself until you can hear your own thinking echo back wrong. That’s when I lean in closer. That’s when I don’t look away.

The world outside tries to interrupt. Bills. Noise. Expectations. All of it begging for commentary. I don’t argue with it anymore. I just mute it the only way I know how—by staying with the work until the noise forgets I exist.

There’s a quiet rebellion in it, I think. Not the loud kind. Nothing anyone would clap for. Just a man refusing to be efficient. Refusing to be optimized. Refusing to turn the process into something clean enough to sell without residue.

She shifts on the table. Her tail flicks once—not impatience, not approval, just acknowledgment. She stays.

I finish the sketch when the coffee is gone and the red is almost gone too. The paper looks back at me like it recognizes something I haven’t named yet. That’s how I know it’s done—not perfect, not resolved, just honest enough to let me sleep.

I wipe my hands on my jeans. Push the chair back. She jumps down, satisfied, as if her presence alone was the supervision required.

If someone asked me later what I like best—what I reach for without thinking—I wouldn’t make a speech about it. I wouldn’t dress it up.

I’d just say it helps me stay in the room.

And some nights, that’s everything.

Daily writing prompt
What’s your favorite candy?

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