Abandonado Grogue Coco Deitou Na Tenda //top\\ | A Visão Das Plantas Acampamento

That camp wasn't forgotten. It was held. The grog, the coconut, the crooked tent—they became an altar to the act of stopping. To collapsing mid-journey. To saying: I can't go further tonight, and that is holy.

The ferns told me about patience—how they unfold their own deaths over and over, each frond a green resurrection. The moss on the tent whispered about softness surviving neglect. The grass that had grown through the campfire's ashes said: Even what burns feeds me. That camp wasn't forgotten

The fire pit was cold, filled with wet ash and the bones of a fire no one tended anymore. A half-empty bottle of grog—cheap, dark, the kind that tastes like regret and salt—stood on a mossy log. Next to it, a cracked coconut, its milk long since drunk or spilled. Flies traced the rim. To collapsing mid-journey

I lay down beside the imprint in the sleeping bag. Not to sleep. To listen. The moss on the tent whispered about softness