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I’m not sure how many guys carry a dream like this, but I picture it vividly: a garden overflowing with flowers, petals blazing in deep pinks and purples, the air thick with warm pollen and sweetness. It’s lush, alive, almost humming. I love the beauty of it—but I don’t want the work of tending it alone. I want the garden to be fed by pleasure instead.

Imagine pulling you close beside the pink petunias, the sunlight catching your skin, the smell of blossoms mixing with heat and anticipation. Laughter turns breathless, bodies press together, and the flowers get more than water—bathed instead in the aftermath of indulgence and release. Later, friends wander through, admiring how fresh everything looks, joking about the “rain” still clinging to the petals, while we share a knowing smile, carrying the secret of how that garden was truly made to bloom.

Definitely nothing this guy would imagine not that I do much imagining, but it definitely sounds like a interesting garden

Why do you hold such a dream? Why the specific colours? Why flowers? Why the daylight?
Also, this is fantasy.
Why?
Are you a writer/journaler?
What do those elements / that fictional garden represent to/for YOU?

3 hours ago, NexumSange said:

Why do you hold such a dream? Why the specific colours? Why flowers? Why the daylight?
Also, this is fantasy.
Why?
Are you a writer/journaler?
What do those elements / that fictional garden represent to/for YOU?

I cradle this dream close to my heart, for dreams are meant to be held like fragile treasures. The deep pinks and purples—I choose them because they burn with the same passion I feel when love takes me over, when desire and tenderness intertwine. I choose flowers, too, for their beauty, their quiet declarations of love, and for the truth they hold: that no two of us are alike, yet we share the same fragility and grace, just as no two petals are ever the same. I could have chosen the night, with its secrets and shadows, to symbolize the hidden sides of ourselves. But how could I capture the tiny miracles—the freckles ***tered across skin, like pollen dusting a bloom—without the light of day? In this, I find both a dream and a fantasy: a hope I carry close, yet a longing I know may never come to be. I would not call myself a writer, nor a devoted chronicler of words. I am someone who lets flowers speak in my stead, letting their beauty tell stories my tongue cannot. Yet, when I do write, it is my heart that spills onto the page—an echo of what I’ve photographed, of the petals and stems I have touched and loved. To me, the garden is sanctuary, a place where beauty can bloom freely, unjudged, and yet fully exposed to the world. Perhaps it is also a confession: an unveiling of my own insecurities, hoping—just hoping—that someone might see them and love them as deeply, as tenderly, as they would a flower in full bloom.

Exactly I forgot how to copy and paste that’s why it took almost 4 hours to reply to one comment. God forbid people actually sit down take the time to properly express themselves how they want to cuz no one does that anymore right?

It’s funny how that reply (and your bio) has a completely different writing style than your post.

Emdash, colon, rules of three, over use of literary devices are all suspect for AI writing

it is AI, for sure

whether this is the OP trying to communicate an idea in his head, or pass-off, well - only he will know

Yes I actually have no problem with AI if it’s done correctly and people don’t try to pass it off as their own work

3 hours ago, MrJoyfinder said:

It’s funny how that reply (and your bio) has a completely different writing style than your post.

I find Joy in your work MrJoyfinder. As I read your comments I found myself wondering, a dream this must be. Perhaps angels were whispering a deep truth, harkening me to notice. I was as interested, as I was amused. A cloud of bliss lifted carried me now. Both the cloud, and my hair, being blown by unseen winds. It was beautiful. Poetic, one might say.

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