Enjambre May 2026

The air itself has a heartbeat.

Enjambre.

To watch a swarm settle is to witness a kind of violence. They do not land; they collapse onto the branch, each insect grappling for purchase, forming a pendulous beard of chitin and industry. The branch groans under a weight that seems impossible for such small things. The sun is occluded. The world behind them becomes a dappled, shifting darkness. enjambre

You realize, with a queer chill, that you are looking at a metaphor for your own thoughts. The way anxieties multiply. The way a single worry begets a dozen, until your mind is a dark, buzzing cloud, each idea indistinguishable from the next, all of them moving with a terrifying, unified purpose. The air itself has a heartbeat

Then, as if a switch has been thrown, the hum changes pitch. It rises. The beard on the branch shivers, loosens, and explodes back into a cloud. The enjambre lifts, a torn piece of shadow peeling away from the world. It drifts over the fence, past the neighbor’s chimney, and dissolves into the haze above the treeline. They do not land; they collapse onto the