The Roughness of Belonging
The smell of damp earth and thick, coarse hair always brings me back to the feeling of a heavy palm resting against my shoulder. It is a dry, sandpaper heat—the kind that settles into your skin after a long day under a relentless sun. There is a specific rhythm to being near something massive, a low-frequency hum that vibrates through the soles of your feet before it ever reaches your ears. It is not a conversation of words, but of pressure; the way a calloused hand knows exactly where to push, and the way a heavy, leathery weight leans back in return. We spend our lives looking for a language that doesn’t require a tongue, a way to be understood that relies entirely on the steady, rhythmic pulse of another living thing. When was the last time you felt the absolute stillness of being completely known by someone who could never speak your name?

Eyad Al Shami has captured this silent language in his beautiful image titled Beast Master. The connection between the two figures feels like a physical weight, grounding the air around them. Can you feel the quiet trust held within their touch?

The Attraction of the Forbidden, by Stefan Thallner