I’m here. I love you. I don’t care if you need to stay up crying all night long, I will stay with you. There’s nothing you can ever do to lose my love. I will protect you until you die, and after your death I will still protect you. I am stronger than Depression and I am braver than Loneliness and nothing will ever exhaust me.
Tag: poetry
Theirs is said to be a marriage of tragedy. They call him deformed, warped, a presence that insulted the heavens; while she was the epitome of beauty, of love.
The poets misspoke.
He is not ugly, though not handsome either, but those eyes. Hard on the world, yet tender on her. His form is something chiseled, stone, a reminder that art is not meant to be beautiful.
She abandons obvious passion for something more alluring. She abandons war in favor of fire.
He holds her gently, long fingers that can glide a breath away from her skin, rendering her paralyzed. He makes. He makes and creates beauty in his hands that doesn’t exist in his face. He makes her calm. He makes her quiet.
She bends to kiss his calloused hands and begs him. Show me your scars. Show me your ash. So he answers in return.
Show me your stars.
Show me your love.
My battle is over.
I don’t have to fight anymore.I feel no pain as the light fades,
No anger, or bitterness, or fear.
And through the hazy, swirling dark,
a hand cups my cheek and a voice whispers:
‘You’ve been so strong for so long.
Now it’s time for you to rest.’
You call witches the violent kind
hidden behind tree barks
and bushes
but it is you holding the scythe
and the torch
while one word from their
rough-hewn lips
could split your bones apart
Don’t you dare pity her
She traded a suffering soul for a throne of bones
She exchanged watchful eyes for a court of her own
The seasons of the earth depended on the very breath she took
She had death wrapped around her fingers and spring at her beck and call and the ruler of the heavens tasked with finding her
She turned the world upside down to find freedom
The daughter of flowers escaped her prison made out of roots and thorns and became the queen of death and forged her new home out of shadows and power
marry me.
let’s spend our week nights eating cereal on the floor
when there is a perfectly fine table behind us.
we can go to the movies and sit in the back row
just to make out like kids falling in love for the first time.marry me.
we’ll paint the rooms of our house
and get more paint on us than the walls.
we can hold hands and go to parties we end up
ditching to drink wine out of the bottle in the bathtub.marry me.
and slow dance with me in our bedroom
with an unmade bed and candles on the nightstand.
let me love you forever.
marry me.

Book of the week: No Matter the Wreckage by Sarah Kay
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She Dreams of Dead Lions
She wakes up to a phone call,
she hadn’t realized she was asleep.
There was an accident they tell her.
And she walks in, past all the mangled bodies,
not bothering to swat the flies away.
Just hoping they were wrong.
That her family was safe in the country.
She wanted to look away,
but oh god it was them.
Her older brother looking peaceful,
her little brother a mess.
There she was, an orphan and an only child in an instant.
Left alone to decide
If she should bury her family separately
or the way they died-all together and without her.
For so long she had been gentle and beautiful
And now she was so angry.
The world has not been good to her,
she wants to watch it burn.
“They’re in a better place” Everyone tells her,
‘Yes,’ she wants to scream, ‘but that’s not the problem.
The problem is they went there without me!’
But instead she smiles sadly, and nods,
Develops a routine.
Wakes up, puts on lipstick and nylons.
You can build things in lipstick and nylons she learns,
But only if you aren’t afraid to get a few runs in them.
She learned there was no shame in being pretty,
because being pretty was her only power left.
She was a queen in the body of a child-
a legend in the body of an orphan.
She decides then
that a god so cruel as to punish her by making her walk through the
hall full of stinking corpses
for growing up without him
was not one she wanted to forgive her.
They told her she still had time to repent.
To ask for forgiveness, for her disbelief and lipstick.
And she, ever the graceful queen in her heart,
yelled back that she would not.
That their god should come crawling at her feet,
that he should ask her forgiveness.
The smell of death isn’t one she was like to forget or forgive.
She cries for hours on the day she laughs for the first time.
And she always buys detective novels,
though there is no little brother to read them anymore.
She volunteers at the hospital,
imagining her little sister, who was going to be a doctor, would be proud
And at night she weeps,
she screams into the night that she is too young,
too young to have so many ghosts.
but when morning comes,
she is a mask of lipstick and waterproof mascara.
There was not as much time for dancing and boys anymore,
the cost of burying 6 people is a tad more than
a girl of twenty had readily available.
After the first few months she stops crying so much,
not because she is less sad or angry,
but because she has simply cried all of her tears.
She still feels a hole in her heart,
gaping and big and dark,
an emptiness where her brothers and sister had lived,
a hollow place where her parents had lived too.
She never goes to weddings.
She always imagines how pure and lovely
her little sister would have been in white.
And she grows older like this,
grows older with her heart screaming
everytime she saw things they’d never have.
She dreams of wearing a lion’s pelt.
And revenge.
She dreams of a lion pouncing on her family,
all the while making her watch.
So he could come for her last.
By then she thinks she has earned her death,
oh but she hopes he chokes on her.
She dreams of a dead god,
dreams he lies with her dagger in his heart,
and the words he was about to say dying on his lips,
‘i forgive you child’
he almost says, in the dream,
and she twists her dagger in his heart,
and whispers to the god of her sister,
“look at all your forgiveness is worth,
maybe you should have sought mine instead.”
they say he stole her,
as if Persephone were only something to be coveted
and not a goddess in her own right,
as if she were not as feared in their realm as he.they say that he corrupted her,
that Hades’s flower wilted under the stench of his death
but they forget that Spring is rebirth,
that if anyone could be touched by the underworld and flourish,
that it would be her.they say that he tricked her,
that she did not want to stay.
but they forget how the winter drags on,
how each year it creeps in sooner,
leaving bones aching for a hint of her warmth,
and it is not because he will not let her leave
it is because
she does not want to go.
