Kiss Me And Close Your Eyes ✦ «Direct»
★★★★☆ (4/5) Recommended if you like: moody poetry, quiet indie film moments, or the last song on an album before the silence.
For some audiences, the simplicity might feel underdeveloped. If expanded, a little more sensory grounding — the temperature of a hand, the sound of a room, the salt on lips — could elevate it from lovely to unforgettable. A few images risk feeling familiar, but the raw emotion mostly saves them. kiss me and close your eyes
The central metaphor is exquisite. The act of closing your eyes while being kissed suggests a willing blindness — to time, to consequence, to the outside world. The writing (or performance) captures that electric moment when two people agree to exist only in sensation, not in thought. The pacing is deliberate, almost breathlike: short, soft phrases followed by longer, aching pauses. There’s an intimacy here that feels stolen, fragile, and all the more precious for it. ★★★★☆ (4/5) Recommended if you like: moody poetry,
Kiss Me and Close Your Eyes is for anyone who has ever loved someone so much they wanted to stop seeing the world and start feeling only them. It’s short, yes. But like the best kisses, you’ll wish it lasted longer — and that’s exactly the point. A few images risk feeling familiar, but the
Here’s a review for a piece titled — written as if for a book, song, or short film, depending on your intended medium. Review: Kiss Me and Close Your Eyes – A Hauntingly Tender Surrender Kiss Me and Close Your Eyes is not just a title; it’s an invitation. Whether experienced as a lyric, a short story, or a visual scene, this work lingers in the space between trust and vulnerability, passion and farewell.
Depending on the context, the piece can read as deeply romantic or quietly devastating. Is the kiss a beginning, or a goodbye? The ambiguity is its strength. One line or stanza might feel like a promise (“I’ll be here when you open them”), while another whispers of departure (“Close your eyes so you don’t see me leave”). That duality stays with you long after the final word.