It is cruel because it gives you just enough hope to keep going. It whispers, "You were born for more than this," just as the rain starts to pour through the hole in your shoe. In the lexicon of polite society, "gutter trash" is an insult. It implies low value. It implies something to be swept away and forgotten.
You lean into the gutter. You light a match. You listen to the melody of your own mangled, beautiful, broken heart.
The gutter trash are the poets who work the night shift. They are the artists who paint with stolen spray paint on condemned walls. They are the lovers who love too hard, break too easily, and drink to forget that they feel everything. cruel serenade gutter trash
But here, in the alley behind the dive bar, we have reclaimed it.
If you are reading this, you might know the tune. It’s the song the world plays for its outcasts, its broken romantics, its gutter trash. And yes, I wear that last term like a badge of honor. A serenade is supposed to be sweet. It’s a lover standing beneath a balcony, promising the moon. But a cruel serenade? That is the promise of the moon followed by the reality of a knife. It is cruel because it gives you just
There is a specific kind of beauty that only exists in the wreckage. It doesn’t live in a penthouse or a gallery opening. It doesn’t smell like Chanel or taste like champagne. It smells like stale rain on asphalt, tastes like cheap whiskey and regret, and sounds like a lullaby played through blown-out speakers in a flooded basement.
— For the gutter trash who still believe in the broken note. What does your cruel serenade sound like? Drop the first lyric that comes to mind in the comments. It implies low value
To the world, we are trash. To each other, we are family. And to the night, we are the only ones awake enough to hear the real music—the cruel, honest, serenade of the damned.