Dirty Loves Holes 🎁 Instant
Because dirt knows what clean forgets — that emptiness is an invitation. A hole is not a lack. It’s a home.
In the garden, a shallow divot draws crumbling earth like a secret. Rain pools there, mixing with loam into something dark and rich. Worms find the hole first, then roots, then the patient hands of a gardener pressing seeds into the warmth. The dirt doesn’t just fill the hole — it nestles . dirty loves holes
So when someone says, “Dirty loves holes,” don’t blush or smirk. Go outside. Find a crack in the sidewalk. Kneel down. Watch the dust drift into it, grain by grain. That’s not entropy. That’s affection. Because dirt knows what clean forgets — that
In the road, a pothole collects grit, gravel, grime from tires. No one thanks the hole for holding the dirt, but the dirt thanks the hole. Without it, dirt would be a flat, forgettable layer — blown away by wind or washed to the gutter. But in a hole, dirt becomes terrain . It gains depth, shadow, purpose. In the garden, a shallow divot draws crumbling
This could be interpreted a few ways — as wordplay, a double entendre, a literal statement, or even a metaphor. Below is a short creative piece written around that phrase, exploring its possible meanings.