Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
mary-7
mary-7
American
you will meet a boy and he won’t know how to love you but he will want to touch you until you smell like his hands. you are not required to let him. you are not less of a person if you do. some nights you will stay up drinking until the sun greets you like butter on your toast, and it will hurt in the most exquisite way you have ever known. there is some pain that we are better for having felt. some nights shame will come to you like a dog you kicked in fear the night before, bruised and aching, but letting yourself be something you never thought you could be is not something you need ever apologize for. the friends you make without trying are the only ones you’ll ever need. the friends whose bed you can sleep in without fear are the best ones you’ll ever find. being afraid is the worst thing you’ll ever do to yourself. fear is a neighbor who bring you sugar without you even having to ask, but I promise you that leaving your front door open will let so many better things in. and when you feel small, remind yourself that at the very least you are a productive member of the water cycle. you drink, and you cry.
0
Apr 24, 2014
Apr 24, 2014 at 12:21 AM UTC
the water cycle
in the pulsing basement with the blue lights people curve their bodies to others like twin quotation marks, the beginning or the end of something, a place so many words could go but for the music swallowing them whole. when will I stop being afraid of you long enough to look you in the eye? don’t tell me a single ****** thing. it’s so hard to like people when you know too much about them. hands on hips press fingerprints into bone, broad palms on slim silhouettes, so many people falling for shadows that we have to keep the lights turned low. stumbling on the swells of the bass, just looking for arms to catch us. we dance like we need another body to support us, like there’s something here left to save. if I don’t try to kiss you will you stay? please don’t give a **** about me. please, just take me home so I can fit the shards of my spine to yours and break myself again in the morning. everything is happening on the wrong side of a wall I built myself but when you throw me up against it I think I can hear my heart a little better. our friends are dancing next to us and I watch them like they know what they’re doing, like here’s a lesson I was born to learn, I have lived this life so many different ways and none of them have ever made him love me. a girl tows a boy up the spiral staircase, dark mascara tracing the shadows beneath her eyes. I wonder if they’ve broken each other yet. I wonder if they’ve found what they’re looking for.
0
Nov 6, 2013
Nov 6, 2013 at 12:50 AM UTC
saturday night
his lips are on your pulse point and his hand is spreading the ribs in your chest, you never realized that being this close to someone meant opening a door. welcoming them in. they make their home beneath your skin and you’re not sure if you want them, their laughter and their touches. their bare chests and their breath. you are a building so many people have tried to wound their way into. there are fault lines in your breastbone and a falter in your pulse and these days your palms are more scar tissue than skin. every breath hurts and the walls of your heart are covered in graffiti you can’t stop yourself from reading. this night is just another room in a hallway that smells of wet paint. burn this house down. leave the cushions on the carpet and the dishes in the sink, smash the mirror with its smudges before you get the chance to think. this has nothing to do with forgiveness. this is how you wake up next to him and tell him to leave. make some new graffiti. sign your name on every surface, fall in love with the contours of your shadow kissing the floors. you are made of smoke and dust and ashes, you are ready to face the day, and there’s no room in you for anyone who doesn’t want to stay.
0
Sep 26, 2013
Sep 26, 2013 at 10:36 PM UTC
new graffiti
A good way to feel lonely is to drive the highways at night. Fall in love like the headlights that never touch, only pass by, feel like writing poetry about the margins that define missed connections. Go home and make as little noise as possible, turn the lights off behind you. You know how to make it look like you were never here. You think this is a sad thing to be good at. A good way to breathe is to wake before the sun and swim in the chlorinated pool, partitioned and glassy, think about brushing elbows with the body in the lane next to yours just to see if you’re still solid. You know you are less dense than water. These days it feels as if someone could pass a hand straight through you. Pull yourself out of the lane and pad to the showers, scour away the clamminess with steam and liquid soap, think about all the lives that intersect in locker rooms and sit in silence for a few minutes just to listen. You like the way the words echo, just in case you missed them the first time. You always miss them the first time. A good way to escape is to order packages from stores you’ve never heard of, diagrammed and backlit, fall in love with the mystery of receiving. Feel the calendar days like empty spaces, hollow and aching, missing parts of your body that can only be filled by the miracles about to arrive in the mail. The postman crunches steadily up the driveway, gravel buried in the treads of his boots. You think this is beautiful, to carry pieces of where you’ve been like last night’s spinach in your teeth. Shameful and secret. Dark and delightful. Something not everyone is capable of loving. Lock eyes like hands, thank him as he turns away. Think about asking him to shake out his boots, so all the roads he’s seen can stay even after he leaves. You need less things to leave. A good way to mourn is to write poetry at night, chasing a tail that tastes like mixed metaphors and melancholia, you have told your story so many different ways and none of them have ever made him love you.   Think about memorizing his handwriting and using it as your own. Write grocery lists that could be his and taper your signature to lines so sharp they pierce and wound. If you’re going to use his hand,   make it hurt. The curves of these letters do not belong to you. Your hands are so broken they can do nothing but miss him, and there are suddenly too many teeth in the sickle of your smile. This may be one fight you never seem to stop losing and I know most nights the lines of his shoulders cut like knives but believe me, this is the most exquisite way to bleed. If you’re going to hurt, make it poetry.
0
Aug 20, 2013
Aug 20, 2013 at 12:18 AM UTC
A Good Way to Miss Him
A good way to feel lonely is to drive the highways at night. Fall in love like the headlights that never touch, only pass by, feel like writing poetry about the margins that define missed connections. Go home and make as little noise as possible, turn the lights off behind you. You know how to make it look like you were never here. You think this is a sad thing to be good at. A good way to breathe is to wake before the sun and swim in the chlorinated pool, partitioned and glassy, think about brushing elbows with the body in the lane next to yours just to see if you’re still solid. You know you are less dense than water. These days it feels as if someone could pass a hand straight through you. Pull yourself out of the lane and pad to the showers, scour away the clamminess with steam and liquid soap, think about all the lives that intersect in locker rooms and sit in silence for a few minutes just to listen. You like the way the words echo, just in case you missed them the first time. You always miss them the first time. A good way to escape is to order packages from stores you’ve never heard of, diagrammed and backlit, fall in love with the mystery of receiving. Feel the calendar days like empty spaces, hollow and aching, missing parts of your body that can only be filled by the miracles about to arrive in the mail. The postman crunches steadily up the driveway, gravel buried in the treads of his boots. You think this is beautiful, to carry pieces of where you’ve been like last night’s spinach in your teeth. Shameful and secret. Dark and delightful. Something not everyone is capable of loving. Lock eyes like hands, thank him as he turns away. Think about asking him to shake out his boots, so all the roads he’s seen can stay even after he leaves. You need less things to leave. A good way to mourn is to write poetry at night, chasing a tail that tastes like mixed metaphors and melancholia, you have told your story so many different ways and none of them have ever made him love you.   Think about memorizing his handwriting and using it as your own. Write grocery lists that could be his and taper your signature to lines so sharp they pierce and wound. If you’re going to use his hand,   make it hurt. The curves of these letters do not belong to you. Your hands are so broken they can do nothing but miss him, and there are suddenly too many teeth in the sickle of your smile. This may be one fight you never seem to stop losing and I know most nights the lines of his shoulders cut like knives but believe me, this is the most exquisite way to bleed. If you’re going to hurt, make it poetry.
Continue reading...
99
This is what it is to fall for a boy with blurry edges. He will be unfinished but you will trust him anyway. This is how you learn how tenderness can be the texture of a hand in the darkness, the chill kiss of wind on your cheek, something you never saw coming. This is how not to write a sad story. Say something a little sweeter. Smile like that night he locked his keys in his car and you spent four hours learning how to break into something you had no right to be in. Forgive him for being one more door your hands shook too hard to open. This is how your song goes. You bring the lyrics and he brings the tempo, you choreograph the dance and he forgets the steps but you forgive him. You had a dream once where you got married, you never told him that, the wedding was in your study and he showed up half an hour late. You cried. You hugged him. You were in love. Even your dreams taste like disappointment. This is how melancholy marks you, hopeful and hurting, how you make stained glass windows out of the shards inside your chest. This is how you bleed and make it something beautiful. You went to his party and you swam in the pool. You ate his ice cream and you took his love. His refrigerator looks like a love letter to your face but he won’t speak to you in person, you wonder when you stopped being two people in the same picture and started smelling like wet paint. Your life like a song you sing to yourself, an old one, the kind where the words come easy. His name like a tattoo you shouldn’t have gotten, a memory you can’t give back. How did you end up here. This is where the music stops, the band packs up, your family kisses you and walks out the door. This is when the party’s over and no one wants your sadness anymore. Vibrating and waiting. You have lived all your life to hit this note. Heart like a washing machine. Heart like a peanut butter sandwich. Heart cracked open on the surgery table, hopeful and broken. Haggard and raw. They tell you when you use a muscle too much you can hurt it. It is beautiful to be the architect of your own injuries, to choose who will do you harm. To understand that healing is just another way of getting stronger. This is how you look out the window every night and forgive him. His face like a mistake you could have made and always did, like there could still be something more than this. This is what it is to love in a world where people can be broken. To believe they can be fixed.
0
Jul 28, 2013
Jul 28, 2013 at 11:33 PM UTC
Break Me
This is what it is to fall for a boy with blurry edges. He will be unfinished but you will trust him anyway. This is how you learn how tenderness can be the texture of a hand in the darkness, the chill kiss of wind on your cheek, something you never saw coming. This is how not to write a sad story. Say something a little sweeter. Smile like that night he locked his keys in his car and you spent four hours learning how to break into something you had no right to be in. Forgive him for being one more door your hands shook too hard to open. This is how your song goes. You bring the lyrics and he brings the tempo, you choreograph the dance and he forgets the steps but you forgive him. You had a dream once where you got married, you never told him that, the wedding was in your study and he showed up half an hour late. You cried. You hugged him. You were in love. Even your dreams taste like disappointment. This is how melancholy marks you, hopeful and hurting, how you make stained glass windows out of the shards inside your chest. This is how you bleed and make it something beautiful. You went to his party and you swam in the pool. You ate his ice cream and you took his love. His refrigerator looks like a love letter to your face but he won’t speak to you in person, you wonder when you stopped being two people in the same picture and started smelling like wet paint. Your life like a song you sing to yourself, an old one, the kind where the words come easy. His name like a tattoo you shouldn’t have gotten, a memory you can’t give back. How did you end up here. This is where the music stops, the band packs up, your family kisses you and walks out the door. This is when the party’s over and no one wants your sadness anymore. Vibrating and waiting. You have lived all your life to hit this note. Heart like a washing machine. Heart like a peanut butter sandwich. Heart cracked open on the surgery table, hopeful and broken. Haggard and raw. They tell you when you use a muscle too much you can hurt it. It is beautiful to be the architect of your own injuries, to choose who will do you harm. To understand that healing is just another way of getting stronger. This is how you look out the window every night and forgive him. His face like a mistake you could have made and always did, like there could still be something more than this. This is what it is to love in a world where people can be broken. To believe they can be fixed.
Continue reading...
79
I am sorry about the letters I wrote you in red ink, the swells and valleys of your body that I never learned to love. I am sorry for making you a war zone, for the carnage and the crime, the cruel topography of the boot prints I left inside of your skull. Especially those. You see, I was taught how to choke the things I love with fists stained blue and bleeding, to shake till they are limp as a rag doll and cry over their prone form, but never how to touch the planes of your face without leaving frost on your wings, ice behind the shutters of your eyes. I’m sorry for all the time you spent tending the garden of your sorrow, I’m sorry that your tears didn’t help the flowers bloom. I’m sorry that the bathroom mirror knows you best wild-eyed at 2 am, asking it ragged and heartsore who will love me now. who could love me. I’m sorry that when I say I’m trying to be better it sounds like an apology for not being good enough. I’m sorry that there are days when your poems read like grocery lists of all the lies I told you when you cried. Forgive me. I’m sorry we never learned how to fall into and not through, sorry the slopes of the letters in the words we speak aren’t the bridges we mean them as. I’m sorry I buried you under the couch in that therapist’s office. your tears were saltwater I couldn’t allow myself to drink. I lived on a desert island and could not permit myself the pleasure of a mirage. I’m sorry that I never believed you could be someone I could understand. I’m sorry that you’ve spent so much time looking for someone to love you. I’m sorry it couldn’t be me.
0
Jul 9, 2013
Jul 9, 2013 at 9:56 PM UTC
Apology to the Girl Who Trusted Me
I am sorry about the letters I wrote you in red ink, the swells and valleys of your body that I never learned to love. I am sorry for making you a war zone, for the carnage and the crime, the cruel topography of the boot prints I left inside of your skull. Especially those. You see, I was taught how to choke the things I love with fists stained blue and bleeding, to shake till they are limp as a rag doll and cry over their prone form, but never how to touch the planes of your face without leaving frost on your wings, ice behind the shutters of your eyes. I’m sorry for all the time you spent tending the garden of your sorrow, I’m sorry that your tears didn’t help the flowers bloom. I’m sorry that the bathroom mirror knows you best wild-eyed at 2 am, asking it ragged and heartsore who will love me now. who could love me. I’m sorry that when I say I’m trying to be better it sounds like an apology for not being good enough. I’m sorry that there are days when your poems read like grocery lists of all the lies I told you when you cried. Forgive me. I’m sorry we never learned how to fall into and not through, sorry the slopes of the letters in the words we speak aren’t the bridges we mean them as. I’m sorry I buried you under the couch in that therapist’s office. your tears were saltwater I couldn’t allow myself to drink. I lived on a desert island and could not permit myself the pleasure of a mirage. I’m sorry that I never believed you could be someone I could understand. I’m sorry that you’ve spent so much time looking for someone to love you. I’m sorry it couldn’t be me.
Continue reading...
47
You are my favorite room to cry in and I see your face in every “If Found, Please Return” sign I pass. This one’s for you. I draft up posters that say I lost a boy, you know the type, the one with the eyes like two-way mirrors that you can see into but not through, the one with salsa music in his bloodstream, the one with the arms always wrapped around someone who is not me. Sometimes I close my eyes and I sing you the song about how the world never stops turning while you dance four hundred miles away pressed against the meter of another heart. A different beat. I’d send you an invitation to my party but I think your address has changed and I’m too afraid to ask. I ask our friends instead. I have forgotten how to write you poems that do not read like eulogies to something long dead.
0
Jun 19, 2013
Jun 19, 2013 at 1:07 PM UTC
400 Miles
I may hide my face when I cry but please do not ever understand that as an act of contrition. when you weep, your hurt is something sacred. do not ever be ashamed. I will sing you to sleep with that song that says when you weep the world cries with you, that the ocean is a sea of tears shed for the pleasure of sharing your pain. I have been springing leaks from other people for as long as I have had fingers to plug the cracks, spent many hours wrestling with the rusted faucet of my feelings. I have never learned how to turn it off. I know your sadness seems like a suit custom-made to fit but I also know you as a girl who is capable of growing. spread your shoulders. tear the seams. there is a certain satisfaction that comes from the destruction of everything you were supposed to love but never did. I should know. I spent last night with only the seam ripper to talk to, shedding the last of my dovetail layers. we both know sharp objects keep their secrets well but if you listened closely you might hear it whisper about how it pricked my finger and found poetry in my veins. You will find that people write things that make you want to believe them and that sometimes belief will hurt too, but I promise you the things you place in the palms of hope will be given back in the shape of other people’s hands. And I know there are days when your sugar plum feet are raw and melting from the puddles but just remember that sometimes words are made of letters that we can slide into each other from and a crack between two people is just a new seam waiting to be sewn.
0
May 13, 2013
May 13, 2013 at 6:50 PM UTC
seams
I may hide my face when I cry but please do not ever understand that as an act of contrition. when you weep, your hurt is something sacred. do not ever be ashamed. I will sing you to sleep with that song that says when you weep the world cries with you, that the ocean is a sea of tears shed for the pleasure of sharing your pain. I have been springing leaks from other people for as long as I have had fingers to plug the cracks, spent many hours wrestling with the rusted faucet of my feelings. I have never learned how to turn it off. I know your sadness seems like a suit custom-made to fit but I also know you as a girl who is capable of growing. spread your shoulders. tear the seams. there is a certain satisfaction that comes from the destruction of everything you were supposed to love but never did. I should know. I spent last night with only the seam ripper to talk to, shedding the last of my dovetail layers. we both know sharp objects keep their secrets well but if you listened closely you might hear it whisper about how it pricked my finger and found poetry in my veins. You will find that people write things that make you want to believe them and that sometimes belief will hurt too, but I promise you the things you place in the palms of hope will be given back in the shape of other people’s hands. And I know there are days when your sugar plum feet are raw and melting from the puddles but just remember that sometimes words are made of letters that we can slide into each other from and a crack between two people is just a new seam waiting to be sewn.
Continue reading...
32
the wooden sticks are in the fire and never have I ever seen your face in the flames. the hair on your knuckles singing, the hair on my head smelling like smoke, I will still be breathing charcoal as I fall asleep. I will still be tasting melted sugar on my chapped lips, salt in the hollow at the base of my throat. incandescence behind my closed eyes. we flicker and we fall. play that song. the one with the sweeping rhythm, the one you could lose a person in. lose a person in it. close your eyes. swing a little. dance that dance that looks like spontaneity, like you’re keeping me guessing, like you’re waiting to take flight. don’t go. I put the pen to the paper and I try to make the meaning, you dance near the fire and you try not to get burned. I walk back home and close the door and you sing me to sleep silently from across the street. sing a little sweeter. I’m still here. thank you for that bonfire smile. thank you for the warmth. we have seen this movie many times but I must confess that I still gasp. I still weep. I still beg you not to leave me right before you leave me. I have written this poem many times waiting for a different ending but never have I ever been this close to the flames. set me alight. you are a scar that only I can see in the mirror. I have already thrown too many pieces of paper into the flames trying to write you as a beauty mark or a burn. come here. touch me. it has been many years since I have dreamed of breathing fire.
0
May 8, 2013
May 8, 2013 at 11:33 PM UTC
bonfire smile
the wooden sticks are in the fire and never have I ever seen your face in the flames. the hair on your knuckles singing, the hair on my head smelling like smoke, I will still be breathing charcoal as I fall asleep. I will still be tasting melted sugar on my chapped lips, salt in the hollow at the base of my throat. incandescence behind my closed eyes. we flicker and we fall. play that song. the one with the sweeping rhythm, the one you could lose a person in. lose a person in it. close your eyes. swing a little. dance that dance that looks like spontaneity, like you’re keeping me guessing, like you’re waiting to take flight. don’t go. I put the pen to the paper and I try to make the meaning, you dance near the fire and you try not to get burned. I walk back home and close the door and you sing me to sleep silently from across the street. sing a little sweeter. I’m still here. thank you for that bonfire smile. thank you for the warmth. we have seen this movie many times but I must confess that I still gasp. I still weep. I still beg you not to leave me right before you leave me. I have written this poem many times waiting for a different ending but never have I ever been this close to the flames. set me alight. you are a scar that only I can see in the mirror. I have already thrown too many pieces of paper into the flames trying to write you as a beauty mark or a burn. come here. touch me. it has been many years since I have dreamed of breathing fire.
Continue reading...
49
Tell me about the day our hip bones said hello. Your eyebrows curved like cupped hands, how that was more than I’d expected, how the hope bleeding through your fingers stained my temples when you touched them. You believe and it makes me want to build you a skylight, sunk in the rafters like a baby tooth peering shyly from dark gums, my heart is a broken down ***** but you play it just right. You’ve got the body of a musician and there’s something beautiful about your skeleton being on display, your shoulders are blades and they cut right through me. I was a safety deposit box, holding things that were not mine. I was springtime in New England, all baited anticipation and lasting chill. You are an Arizona rainstorm. You are moisture in the desert, thunder in the silence, utterly unprecedented warmth. I have been many things, but never once enough.
0
Mar 26, 2013
Mar 26, 2013 at 6:42 PM UTC
Song on a Broken Down *****