The Silence Between Sparks

An abstract image. Three sparks light up in the darkness

Mrs. Spark drifted quietly through the dark, her glow calm, her silence colder than ash. She didn’t need to shout; sparks know when the fire has gone wrong.

Then she saw her, a bright, jittery flamelet, all fizz and perfume. The bit on the side.

“Oh!” the young spark squealed. “You must be his… main source of combustion.

Mrs. Spark tilted her glow. “So it was you he mistook me for, when he was drunk?”

The younger spark crackled nervously, shrinking to a flicker. “He said it was romantic, you know. That we were destined to ignite.”

Before Mrs. Spark could respond, a distant honk echoed through the night. Both turned their glow toward the sound.

Out of the gloom emerged a clown, riding astride a giraffe with all the ceremony of a knight. The giraffe’s long neck swayed like a burning wick, and the clown’s painted face beamed with absurd solemnity. He tipped his rainbow hat as he passed, jangling bells that fell silent almost immediately in the thick, smoky air. For a moment, their quarrel was paused by this impossible intrusion.

Then came the noise. A low crackling shuffle, like dry leaves catching fire. Out of the shadows lurched the Ashen Sparks, brittle, half-dead remnants of old fires, dragging themselves forward, hissing with envy for the living glow.

The Ashens struck suddenly. One lunged at the young flamelet and sank its ember-teeth into her arm. She screamed, sparks spilling from the wound. Mrs. Spark tried to pull her away, but more of the creatures closed in, circling like vultures.

Just as the swarm pressed tighter, Mr. Spark appeared, swinging his blackened baseball bat. He smashed one Ashen into powder, then another, then shoved the rest back with furious swings. “MOVE!” he shouted.

Together, scorched and trembling, the trio fled into a crumbling pharmacy at the edge of the street. Mr. Spark slammed the door shut, wedging a shelf against it as the Ashens clawed uselessly at the glass.

Inside, surrounded by broken pill bottles and the faint smell of disinfectant, they collapsed in the dim glow of a lantern. The young flamelet clutched her burnt arm, teeth gritted. Mrs. Spark’s silence still carried judgment, but for now, survival weighed heavier than betrayal.

Mr. Spark stood watch at the door, his bat resting on his shoulder. “They only come at night,” he said grimly. “We make it till morning, we live another day.”

And so the three of them, husband, wife, and mistress, sat together in uneasy alliance, waiting for dawn, while the Ashens scraped and hissed in the dark outside.

Honestly, the Zombie Apocalypse Sounds Kinda Nice!

An image of the interior of an office building that has been reclaimed by nature.

Survival horror games. Apocalyptic movies. Zombie TV shows. They keep showing us the end of the world.

And the strange thing is, I find it comforting.

Not the death, or the gore, or the terrifying monsters.
But the quiet that follows.

In games like The Last of Us, in the atmosphere of 28 Years Later, in the long, dangerous walks through empty cities overrun by moss and silence, there is a strange kind of peace. These stories are about zombies, sure, but only in the way that space operas are about rockets. The real story is human.

Stripped of society, of rules, of etiquette and expectation.
Just survival. And with it, a return to something real.


A Common Fantasy, Quietly Shared

I don’t think I’m alone in this. There’s something telling about how many people are drawn to post-apocalyptic settings. We say it’s escapism, but maybe it’s something deeper. Maybe it’s yearning.

A yearning for everything to finally break, so we’re allowed to default back to our instincts. Those instincts haven’t disappeared, but capitalism has twisted them. Turned survival into branding. Turned curiosity into productivity. Turned strength into silent compliance.

In the fantasy, that spell is broken. We move freely. Nowhere is off-limits except by danger. If you’re brave enough to go, you go. And if you make it out alive, you learn something.

Maybe even about yourself.


A World That Makes Sense Again

You don’t need to fill out a form to matter. You don’t need to chase social media followers to have value. You don’t need a degree, or a permit, or a job title to justify existing.

You just survive. You help others survive. You find food. You stay alert. You sleep lightly. You protect your friends. You trust your gut.

The world becomes dangerous, yes — but finally understandable.


The Beauty of Nature Reclaiming

There’s an awe in seeing vines wrap around office buildings. Trees pushing through broken floor tiles. Roads cracked open and filled with moss.

It’s not just beautiful. It’s poetic.

The industrialised world thought it was permanent. But nature is patient. And in the fantasy, it doesn’t just survive. It reclaims.

It takes back the places that were stolen from it. Quietly. Persistently. Without anger.


Bureaucracy Is the Real Monster

The zombie apocalypse gives us a breath of relief from bureaucracy.

No more tax codes. No more emails. No more forms to fill in triplicate to get permission to be a human being. No more ten-step processes to access your basic rights.

The systems we live under have been patched and repatched so many times, they don’t even resemble their original purpose. Like buggy code that’s been layered with fixes until no one remembers what it was supposed to do in the first place.

Maybe the end of the world is the only bug fix that actually works.


Maybe I’d Finally Be Allowed to Live

I’m not saying I want civilization to collapse.

I’m saying that if it did, I might finally feel like I have a fighting chance.

The world we live in now feels like it was built to crush people like me. People who see too clearly. People who question. People who can survive, but only if allowed to act on their instincts without being penalized for them.

Maybe the end of the world wouldn’t be the end of me.

Maybe it would be the first time I was allowed to live.