Ashen Apr 2026

This is why we turn ashen when we receive bad news. The blood drains from our cheeks, yes. But deeper than that: something inside us has finished burning. The hope, the shock, the adrenaline—the flame has moved on, leaving only the silhouette of our expression behind. But here is the secret that gardeners know, and that poets often forget: ash is not death. Ash is post-life .

Maybe an ashen season is a season of preparation. It is the week between Christmas and New Year’s, when the tinsel looks dull and the champagne is flat. It is the day after a breakup, when your chest feels hollow. It is the hour after the argument, when the shouting stops and the silence feels like a living thing. This is why we turn ashen when we receive bad news

So maybe “ashen” isn’t a bad color to be. The hope, the shock, the adrenaline—the flame has

It isn’t the peaceful quiet of a snowy morning or the gentle hush of a library. It is a heavy, fragile quiet. It is the sound of a world that has finished burning. And its color—its only true color—is . Maybe an ashen season is a season of preparation

In the Color of Ash: On Endings, Silence, and the Beauty of “Ashen”