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Dawnevyn_River
Dawnevyn_River
27/M Hi, I'm Dawnevyn River (he/they). I write from the raw terrain of trauma, neurodivergence, queerness, and the quiet wonder of being alive. I began on Hello Poetry in 2014. Now, I return with a steadier hand and deeper voice to seek beauty in the everyday.
I collect tiny proofs - sea glass, a receipt with somebody else's handwriting, a cat's last breath in a photograph - each one an accusation and a map. I press my palm to the stove and memorize the heat - it is the closest thing to being seen. I kiss someone in the hallway to check if flesh still answers, then wash my mouth with lemon scented dish soap.
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Sep 19, 2025
Sep 19, 2025 at 3:03 PM UTC
Lemon scented dish soap
I have to wash the dishes before I write my suicide note. Put away the clothes on the chair. Water the plants. Feed the cats. Find a lighter that still works. A sweater that doesn't smell of smoke. I need to taste summer fruit with juice running down my wrist and chin. Walk into the river until the current holds me steady. Touch someone's shoulder and not let go too fast. I want to hear a stranger laugh like it matters. Carve initials into damp wood. Keep a secret rock in my pocket until it's smooth with worry. Dance to the music of thunder. Converse with the beetle on my window. I need to read the last page of a book in the sunlight. Collect bones, shells, cigarette butts. Proof I was here. Take a bus to nowhere just to come home again. Tell someone I love them and mean it, even if they forget. Kiss someone I don’t love just to feel the weight of it. The words taste like rain on metal. I’ll take a photo of myself and delete it. Count the cracks in the ceiling. I leave the door unlocked. I crumple up the page. For now.
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Sep 19, 2025
Sep 19, 2025 at 2:56 PM UTC
Before I...
I have been told I speak too much to be ignored. At home, I replay my day, wincing at every door my mouth opened that maybe should've stayed shut. Writing is the only room where I am not wrong for filling the air. Today, a someone said I am good with words. She doesn't usually read other people's captions- but she reads mine. One small compliment and I am lighter. Maybe my words are wanted, maybe they are not noise. Maybe I am not too much.
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Aug 28, 2025
Aug 28, 2025 at 11:12 AM UTC
Noise (Hush)
A day off the map no lighthouse hikes no ferry tickets in my pocket just the cabin walls the pines breathing slow outside I roll up green quiet let the smoke curl through the screen door cracks the air tastes like lakewater and cedar a chapter or two, maybe more the book heavy in my lap but light enough to drift away from when Ethel Cain's voice slips into my ears clean and close like she's laying right beside me no rush, no reason the world can go on spinning its errands while I stay here in bed, half ****** half reading, all the way alive in the hush of Tobermory
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Aug 28, 2025
Aug 28, 2025 at 11:08 AM UTC
Under distant skies
I wake with the sun on my skin, soft sheets, warm cat, the scent of coffee- a life stitched together with quiet blessings. Still, the ache rolls in like fog over golden fields. The world burns somewhere- bombs in bedrooms, mothers in rubble, children clutching silence like a toy they no longer know how to play with. And here I am, eyes full of water for reasons I can't explain, guilt gnawing like a rat at the corners of my comfort. How dare I cry when my fridge hums with food, when I have hands to hold, and laughter that visits, even if it leaves too soon? I bury my sadness under headlines, stacking grief like sandbags to hold back my own storm. But sorrow leaks anyway. Maybe this is the curse of peace- to carry the weight of pain you haven't earned, to feel broken in a life that looks whole. I say thank you and still feel hollow. I pray for others and still feel alone. And I wonder- is it weakness, or just being human, to weep in the garden while the world is on fire?
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Jul 17, 2025
Jul 17, 2025 at 10:05 PM UTC
Spoiled fruit
It starts like static- a flicker in the dark, a shift in the air before the collapse. I'm washing dishes. I'm crossing a street. I'm laughing- and then I'm not. Something small tilts the world. My chest tightens, my skin doesn't feel like mine, and the moment swallows me whole. I hate how they still live in me- their voices in the corners, their hands on the memories I never wanted to keep. The anger simmers under every surface. For what they did, for what they didn't, for how they shaped me without permission. I trace the outlines of what could’ve been- a word spoken, a door opened, a version of me they never got to break. But the past is a house that locks from the inside. I scream through the keyhole and call it healing. Some days I am a person. Some days I am a symptom. I carry both without dropping either. I live with tremors. I move through fog. I smile like nothing cracked, and shake when no one is looking. And still- somehow- I stay. I breathe. I come back to myself. Again.
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Jul 17, 2025
Jul 17, 2025 at 12:05 AM UTC
Fault lines
It doesn't ask. It never knocks. It just shows up- mid-sentence, mid-step, mid-me. My body remembers things I don't want to. Fluorescent lights, locked doors, her voice like venom, his hands, the smoke thick enough to erase a home. I'm split between moments. One version of me is pouring coffee. The other is back in a room I begged to leave, screaming behind my eyes while my face stays still. And people say "but you're safe now." Like my nervous system understands logic. Like my skin doesn't still flinch at kindness, like safety is a thing I've ever known for sure. I carry too many names. ****** Liar. ***** Crazy. He. She. It. I carry too many versions of myself that other people made without asking. And I'm so ******* angry. At her. At them. At the system that locked me up when all I needed was to be held without harm. At the fact that I'm still here trying to make something soft out of what they left jagged. Sometimes I wish I could go back- whisper to the kid who hid under blankets trying to disappear. Tell him: you were right. Tell them: it wasn't your fault. Tell me I'd get out. And I did. But sometimes, parts of me still don't know that. They shake, they shut down, they show up uninvited. And I breathe, even when it burns. And I stay, even when I want to run. And I write, because it's the one place I get to be the one telling the story.
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Jul 17, 2025
Jul 17, 2025 at 12:03 AM UTC
Uninvited
I am good at being alone. The dishes get done when I feel like doing them. Silence hangs like a painting I chose myself. The hours bend gently around me, and I call it peace. I laugh out loud at my own jokes, call it self-love, call it growth. The plants don’t mind if I forget to water them, and neither do I. This is thriving, I tell myself. Then I spend three days with people I love. Not performing. Not planning. Just existing side by side- a meal shared without occasion, laughter that erupts without needing a reason. I remember something older than language: that warmth isn’t just a temperature. That joy has a different flavour when someone else tastes it too. I remember that solitude was never meant to be a permanent home- only a resting place. There is a part of me that longs for gardens we plant together, for walls we build with laughter baked in. For shoes at the door that aren’t all mine. Maybe the soul remembers what modern life unlearned- that we were made to brush shoulders to pass bread to belong. And maybe what I called thriving was just surviving with the lights on.
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Jun 19, 2025
Jun 19, 2025 at 10:40 AM UTC
Surviving with the lights on
The sixteen-year-old dishwasher at work told me she checks the schedule-hoping we’ll share the same shifts. She said she missed me when I took a day off. A new hire said I have a “wholesome vibe,” like it was the kindest thing he could offer. A new friend and I sat in his new room, talking about how hard it is to make friends as adults-how rare it is when it feels this easy. My best friend, miles away, messages to say she got the postcard I sent. She says she loves me. The one I’m dating tells me I can make mistakes without being a mistake. A stranger-turned-friend listed all the things she liked about me-minutes after we met. I didn’t know what to say. I smile for hours. My six-year-old cousins video call me, bursting with stories about their day with my parents. They wave a pride flag on a picnic blanket in the backyard, proud of their brave big cousin. They correct anyone who calls me by my deadname like it’s the easiest truth in the world. My mom checks in. She knows it’s been a heavy week. My dad spends his free time under the hood of my car, my mom hands me her keys so I don’t have to worry. I visit an old friend's memorial, tell him everything I wish I could have said in person. The wind listens. I think he does, too. My best friend and I scream old songs in the car, drive to a park by the water, swing until we’re dizzy and aching, and laugh because we’re not kids anymore-but we still want to feel like it. Another friend is moving out on his own. He asks me to help him make the space feel like home. I say yes, of course. It's an honor. A best friend and I trade 'I miss yous' like warm hugs un words. I buy concert tickets for another best friend. It’s one of my favorite artists. We’ll sing ourselves hoarse. I text my childhood best friend: Happy Pride. Two words that carry years. I go to a Pride party with my parents and friends. I feel the weight of belonging and it is light. I plan to trade plants with a girl from work. Roots change hands. Something grows. And for a moment-no, longer than a moment-I realize:I am overflowing with love.
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Jun 17, 2025
Jun 17, 2025 at 11:43 AM UTC
The past few sunrises and the love that's found me.
The sixteen-year-old dishwasher at work told me she checks the schedule-hoping we’ll share the same shifts. She said she missed me when I took a day off. A new hire said I have a “wholesome vibe,” like it was the kindest thing he could offer. A new friend and I sat in his new room, talking about how hard it is to make friends as adults-how rare it is when it feels this easy. My best friend, miles away, messages to say she got the postcard I sent. She says she loves me. The one I’m dating tells me I can make mistakes without being a mistake. A stranger-turned-friend listed all the things she liked about me-minutes after we met. I didn’t know what to say. I smile for hours. My six-year-old cousins video call me, bursting with stories about their day with my parents. They wave a pride flag on a picnic blanket in the backyard, proud of their brave big cousin. They correct anyone who calls me by my deadname like it’s the easiest truth in the world. My mom checks in. She knows it’s been a heavy week. My dad spends his free time under the hood of my car, my mom hands me her keys so I don’t have to worry. I visit an old friend's memorial, tell him everything I wish I could have said in person. The wind listens. I think he does, too. My best friend and I scream old songs in the car, drive to a park by the water, swing until we’re dizzy and aching, and laugh because we’re not kids anymore-but we still want to feel like it. Another friend is moving out on his own. He asks me to help him make the space feel like home. I say yes, of course. It's an honor. A best friend and I trade 'I miss yous' like warm hugs un words. I buy concert tickets for another best friend. It’s one of my favorite artists. We’ll sing ourselves hoarse. I text my childhood best friend: Happy Pride. Two words that carry years. I go to a Pride party with my parents and friends. I feel the weight of belonging and it is light. I plan to trade plants with a girl from work. Roots change hands. Something grows. And for a moment-no, longer than a moment-I realize:I am overflowing with love.
Continue reading...
19
This week, I remembered how to hold things gently- how to sit in a sunlit room with laughter and not flinch at the brightness. I made time. Not borrowed, not stolen, not carved from guilt, but real time- offered with open hands to people who make me feel like more than a body on a schedule. There were hours that didn’t apologize for passing, moments that asked nothing from me but presence. I gave what I had, and still had something left. Even joy. Even peace. This week didn’t ask me to survive it. It let me belong to it. And now, at the edge of it all, I’m quietly afraid- that I will look back on these days from some far-off place where time slips like water, and wonder if this was just a rare breath before the drowning begins again.
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Jun 17, 2025
Jun 17, 2025 at 11:40 AM UTC
More than a body on a schedule