Then hate arrived, not loud, but certain — a slow unthreading of every kiss, each stitch of forgiveness undone by a single tug.
Love came first, soft as the inside of a collar. It whispered: Stay. The Dream Love Hate Zip
In the dream, there was no color — only the zip of a jacket being pulled up, then down, then up again. The sound was a heartbeat, or maybe a warning. Then hate arrived, not loud, but certain —
Here’s a draft text based on the title I’ve written it as a short poetic / abstract piece, but I can adapt the tone (e.g., more narrative, lyrical, or analytical) if you clarify the context. The Dream Love Hate Zip In the dream, there was no color —
The zip moved on its own, caught between wanting to close and needing to break. It remembered every time a mouth said forever but meant for now . It knew the weight of a coat put on someone else’s shoulders in the rain.
Love, hate, dream, zip. One syllable each. Four ways of saying: I almost held it.
When I woke, my hands were empty, but the sound remained — a cold metal whisper running up and down the spine of something unfinished.