What does separation look like? A wall? A wave? A body of water? A ripple of light or a shimmer of subatomic particles, parting? What does it feel like to push through? Her fingers press against the rag surface of her dream, recognize the tenacity of filaments and know that it is paper about to tear, but for the fibrous memory that still lingers there, supple, vascular, and standing tall. The tree was past and the paper is present, and yet paper still remembers holding itself upright and altogether. Like a dream, it remembers its sap.
The text explores the concept of separation and what it entails, asking thought-provoking questions about its nature. It suggests that separation can take various forms, such as walls or waves, indicating a deeper philosophical inquiry into our experiences of division and continuity in life. The imagery evokes a sense of searching for understanding in the complexities of existence.
The narrator reflects on a dream and the physical sensations tied to it, particularly the texture of paper that symbolizes memory. The paper acknowledges its origin, connected to the vitality of a tree, and embodies a sense of resilience. This duality highlights how past experiences are ingrained in the present, suggesting that even in separation, there is a lingering connection to what once was, akin to the remnants of a dream.