Misarmor . A home in the desert. A word she invented because no other word fit: the place where you finally take off everything you were carrying, and discover you are still standing.
She built her home in the Sonoran bleached-bone heat. A small structure of adobe and salvaged glass, where the sun split into amber and rust across a dirt floor. Outside, the creosote breathed after rain—resinous, ancient, medicinal. She had come here to shed things: a marriage, a city, the sharp little anxieties that accumulate like dust in the folds of urban life. But shedding, she learned, was not the same as healing. misarmor - a home in the desert
The home was small, but the desert was not. She learned to read the wash patterns, the scorpion’s glitter, the patience of saguaros that took fifty years to grow a single arm. She learned that armor in this place was not metal or grit. It was sitting still while the heat shimmered and your throat burned. It was choosing, each morning, to stay. Misarmor
Misarmor . She felt it most at dusk. That blue hour when the heat breaks and the coyotes tune their ragged chorus. In the city, she had worn a thousand small armors—politeness, efficiency, the right shoes, the sharp reply that never came. Here, none of them worked. The desert stripped her. Sun cracked her lips. Wind erased her footprints before she could look back. At night, the silence was so total she could hear her own pulse—a frightened animal she’d been ignoring for years. She built her home in the Sonoran bleached-bone heat