Love, in its purest form, is often spoken of as salvation. In Damned, it becomes something far more dangerous.
Across fourteen haunting poems, a solitary voice wrestles with devotion that refuses to fade-even when it is unreturned, forbidden, or destined to end. The speaker loves with a fervor that borders on worship, holding a beloved who drifts ever further away: toward ambition, toward another life, toward a world where she no longer belongs. Yet she remains-torn between faith and resentment, hope and resignation-building entire worlds out of stolen moments, whispered prayers, and memories that refuse to die.
From quiet longing to bitter revelation, Damned traces the slow transformation of a lover who gives everything and receives silence in return. It is a meditation on the loneliness of loving too deeply, the fragile illusion of forever, and the quiet strength forged in heartbreak.
Tender, intimate, and devastatingly honest, Damned asks a simple question:
What becomes of a heart that refuses to stop loving-even when love itself becomes its undoing?