One Hundred and Nineteen Seconds
March 17 St. Patrick's Day

The bar is too quiet for a Tuesday.
The wood of the table is scarred,
a map of lives passed through here,
leaving rings of moisture and half-forgotten ghost stories.
I ordered a Guinness,
the thick, dark head settling slowly,
a miniature storm in a glass,
gravity working its patient, obsidian magic.
It looks like the sky over the coast back home,
before the rain turns everything to iron and salt.
They say it takes one hundred and nineteen seconds to pour perfectly,
a precise science for a chaotic world.
I watch the bubbles fight their way upward,
a frantic, vertical pilgrimage
against the heavy, settling velvet.
I am waiting for a door to swing open,
for your laughter to cut through the stale air
like a blade through smoke.
But the seat opposite stays empty,
a wooden monument to absence.
The stout sits heavy, cold against my palm.
I drink to the space you don't occupy,
to the conversations we didn't finish,
to the way the light catches the foam
and reminds me that even the most perfect things
eventually go flat.
There is a comfort in the bitterness,
the way it coats the throat,
a small, manageable grief
in a glass that is slowly, inevitably,
finding its bottom.
I look at the clock.
Another minute gone.
The pub is still quiet.
The glass is still full enough to pretend,
and I am still here,
tracing the condensation,
learning the shape of loneliness
one slow sip at a time.
About the Creator
Diane Foster
I’m a professional writer, proofreader, and all-round online entrepreneur, UK. I’m married to a rock star who had his long-awaited liver transplant in August 2025.
When not working, you’ll find me with a glass of wine, immersed in poetry.




Comments (1)
👏👏👏"Even the most perfect things go flat" loved it, great job.