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Kir Apr 2018
His music was my undoing.
Engraved in both heart and head,
It was a cry; 'Wait for me',
A promise not yet spoken,
A promise I thought was to me

So I waited for him,
Whom I had loved above all else.
Maybe it was because
That’s where he believed himself to be;
Above all else.

I waited, as his song asked,
Until my bed was cold,
Reminding me of the hole he left,
And the silence previously filled with his words,
Smooth as honey, and just as sweet

As I waited, I was reminded
Of the way he moved his hands,
Of the way he spoke his words,
Of the way he parted his lips.
Singing a silent lullaby only I could hear

No one could replace him,
For the hurricane in his eyes,
The storm of greys and blues,
Had ripped my resolve to shreds.
But I knew that the storm was for me,

Solace eluded me, unable to be found
In neither myself nor another.
When it wasn't his touch, soft like petals
Petals that withered in his absence,
Ready to bloom again at his return

My entire world faded to grey,
His words no longer bringing it color,
Because I couldn't fathom,
Any other way to hear about those colors,
Than from the songs that left his mouth.

In the end I thought I would be fine,
Living in a world without him,
Standing on my own two feet
But I have lost my balance and fallen
His music no longer there to catch me
Kir Apr 2018
Two paths, leading in different directions
I'm disheartened I can not follow both
Being a single traveler, I stand, thinking
Looking down each path, knowing
That there would be no turning back

I look as far as my eyes can see,
Through the fog and trees obstructing my view
Keeping me from seeing the end of either
I was to take a blind leap, into the unknown

As I thought, I stepped towards one
Only to take my next step towards the other
Neither path would claim victory over another
Because they are both equal in my mind

Both paths are grassy and worn flat
By those who came before me that chose
Though as I stand, unable to decide,
They had been tread nearly the same,

And both, on this morning, stay as equals
No footprint any older than any other
Alas, I keep my eyes to those two paths
Turning and walking away from both

Because although I know they both lead forward
I doubted if I would ever make my choice
So I'd rather come back another day
Despite having come back several times already

I should tell this with sighs or groans
Somewhere within me I know; I feel
These two paths, diverging in their own ways
I take the one route no one every has before

Back to the beginning, from where I had come
I am unable to chose one over the other,
For neither reveal themselves to me,
And where they lead is too unclear.
Kir Apr 2018
Kids ride down the street,
On razor scooters and bicycles
As I am reminded again
Of the childhood I missed out on.
Of the childhood that was stolen from me.

I remember our small house,
In a large neighborhood,
Filled with adults and children alike.
And how, although we lived together,
My parents never felt like family.

I remember playing with the other kids,
Running through houses and yards,
Creating our own games, our own stories.
Pretending to be cowboys, or astronauts;
Anything we were not.

I remember the fights.
Screaming and yelling and slamming doors,
The brutal, tear-filled aftermaths,
Harsh words that could not be unsaid.
My bruises, her bruises, his bruises.

I remember the first time it really snowed.
My fondest memory; icy and unforgiving.
We had built an army, one under our command,
Snowmen dressed with coal eyes and carrot noses.
We thought - hoped - that they could protect us.

I remember my parents,
I remember the cold nights and long days.
I think, if I could see them again
I would thank them for my memories.
Even the not-so-great ones.

I remember my childhood.
I remember my “family”.
I remember our neighbors, and their children.
I remember the fun, the fights, the fear.
I remember thinking: “is this how’s it’s supposed to be?”

These memories have engrained themselves in my mind,
Things I can never forget
This childhood that was supposed to be mine.
Yeah, I remember;
And I wish I could get it all back.

— The End —