
LUNA EDITH
Bio
Writer, storyteller, and lifelong learner. I share thoughts on life, creativity, and everything in between. Here to connect, inspire, and grow — one story at a time.
Stories (276)
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The Room I Locked Away from Time
At the very end of the upstairs corridor, where the light gives up and the floorboards grow quiet, there is a door no one notices anymore. It’s plain, swallowed by dust and shadow, its edges blurred into the wallpaper as if the house itself has tried to forget it exists. I rarely walk that far. Still, sometimes—while turning into one of the rooms I still use—I feel my gaze tugged toward it, the way a half-remembered dream tugs at waking thought. The moment never lasts. My eyes tire easily these days, and memory has learned to stay silent.
By LUNA EDITH3 months ago in Poets
Gaps to the Sky
On nights like tonight, the world feels simultaneously immense and intimate. Constellations emerge, careful and deliberate, threading the black canvas above. Branches sway in the winter wind, skeletal and stark, creating gaps through which starlight flickers and dances. The spaces between the limbs, stripped of leaves, are openings to something larger, something beyond my reach — yet perfectly within sight.
By LUNA EDITH3 months ago in Poets
The Basement of Forgotten Memories
Just one more box. I muttered the words under my breath as I stepped back into the house where I had grown up. On paper, losing my parents in a car crash was a tragedy, unavoidable and heartbreaking. In reality, I felt nothing. We hadn’t spoken in years, hadn’t even looked at one another for longer than I cared to remember.
By LUNA EDITH3 months ago in Humans
Soft word
There are moments in life that don’t arrive with fireworks or grand announcements. Some moments come quietly, like a fingertip tapping the surface of still water, sending out ripples that reach farther than you realize. For me, the moment that altered the course of my life wasn’t loud or dramatic. It was a soft word—offered on an ordinary afternoon—that dismantled years of noise inside me.
By LUNA EDITH3 months ago in Humans
Where My Soul Learned to Listen
There are places we remember because they were beautiful, and there are places we remember because they refused to let us leave unchanged. Mine was neither a city nor a house nor any landmark someone could pin on a map. It was a small riverside clearing behind my grandmother’s old cottage — a place so quiet that even the wind seemed to tread lightly.
By LUNA EDITH3 months ago in Poets
Time Slip
The glow began as a tremor. Not in the walls, but in the air itself—an amber breathing, the way sunlight sometimes catches dust motes and holds them still, as if the world is pausing to think. The protagonist—Aria, though the house had always whispered her name like it knew her before she knew herself—stood in the narrow hallway of her grandmother’s old home. The wallpaper was faded with vines and little painted birds, the kind you only notice when the light arrives at a certain angle.
By LUNA EDITH3 months ago in Poets
Grandma Goes Viral
When Grandma Edna first picked up her smartphone, she had one goal: to send a video of her legendary apple pie recipe to her granddaughter, Lily. She wasn’t interested in social media trends or viral fame—she just wanted Lily to taste the warmth and care baked into every slice. Little did she know that the world was about to fall in love with her.
By LUNA EDITH3 months ago in Families
Sundial Sonnets
They say every city keeps one secret rooftop, a place where the noise grows shy and the wind remembers your name. The rooftop garden above Building Forty-Three was such a place. Most people assumed the rusted elevator simply didn’t go that high anymore, but the truth was simpler: the garden didn’t want to be found by anyone who wasn’t ready to slow down.
By LUNA EDITH3 months ago in Poets
Margarita on the Balcony
Every Friday at five o’clock—never five-oh-one, never quarter-to—Mrs. Lillian Hart and Mr. Emilio Alvarez stepped out onto their side-by-side balconies like actors taking the stage for a play written only in the language of ritual. The two balconies faced the same peach-colored courtyard, their wrought-iron railings close enough that the breeze tangled the geraniums together. Between them sat a small round table, half on her side, half on his, hosting a single margarita in a salt-rimmed glass.
By LUNA EDITH3 months ago in Fiction











