Home Reflections The Salt on the Skin

The Salt on the Skin

The air at the edge of the tide tastes of sharp, wet minerals and the metallic tang of deep water. I remember the feeling of sand between my toes—not the dry, loose kind, but the packed, damp earth that yields just enough to hold the shape of a footfall before the ocean rushes in to erase it. There is a specific rhythm to running near the surf, a frantic, heavy pulse where the legs grow tired and the lungs burn with the cold, damp mist. It is a sensation of being suspended between the solid ground and the infinite pull of the horizon. We spend so much of our lives trying to leave a mark, pressing our weight into the world, yet the water always waits to smooth the surface back into a mirror. Does the earth remember the pressure of our stride, or are we merely ghosts passing over the surface of a vast, indifferent blue?

The Unnoticed Messiah by Mostafa Monwar