Gloryhole Swallow Faith Work May 2026

Raw, vulnerable, philosophical.

Faith isn’t believing in the visible. Faith is the muscle in your throat that relaxes instead of clenches. It’s the surrender to the unknown. It’s the trust that on the other side of that crumbling wall—behind the rough hands and the muffled groan of a stranger—there is still a human being begging to be accepted without judgment.

So yeah. I have faith. Not in God. Not in politics. But in the hole. And the swallow. And the beautiful, terrifying grace of letting the stranger on the other side be a saint, just for tonight. gloryhole swallow faith

It was in a cracked tile bathroom at a truck stop off Interstate 9. A place that smells of bleach, stale cigarettes, and desperation. A place where the lights flicker like a dying heartbeat.

We spend our whole lives building walls. Drywall. Ego. Prejudice. Then we drill a single hole in them just to remind ourselves that we are not an island. Raw, vulnerable, philosophical

There’s a hole in the wall. Chest-high. Patched with duct tape and graffiti. On my side, I’m just knees on cold concrete. I can’t see his face. I don’t know his name, his sins, or if he voted the same way I did. I know nothing.

This isn't about the act. It’s about the . It’s the surrender to the unknown

Here’s a draft for a provocative, narrative-driven piece of content based on the phrase It’s written as a short, gritty confessional monologue, suitable for a literary blog, spoken word performance, or an underground storytelling podcast. Title: The Communion of Concrete and Trust