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promare
F "Her heart, which was easily moved by honest trustworthiness, compelled her to shed a secret tear" Mao Dun, Rainbow, pg 121.
God is not human. Only humans can **** and mourn in the same day.
0
Jul 16, 2021
Jul 16, 2021 at 1:02 AM UTC
death: july 14, 2pm
content warning: blood, violence, panic attack I sit in the emptiness of the family room by myself. Cradle my head in my hands, unable to close my eyes as they stare through the gaps between my fingers. Despite the still environment, my heart is racing alongside the thoughts: run or they’ll **** you, so much blood… The door opens despite the lock. So much BLOOD! Mother steps in, her boyfriend, my sister too, grandma and grandpa. Tears slip between my fingers, unwilling to be held behind my last sense of self-control. The lock failed, I'm terrified seeing the blood-driven amusement across their faces. “Look!” My sister calls, and I see the meat cleaver she’s holding slice through mom’s head. So much blood. Mom laughs from the floor. Grandfather holds a gun up to sister’s head, and then the pieces of her splattered across the walls laugh in crescendo. I’m different from them. They approach me now. I know I’ll die. I have no means of fighting back with these useless, shaky hands. Hands that inscribe their own pain into my cheeks, nails peeling the skin away as I panic. I’m going to die, and I scream like it. “Stay away from me!” So much blood. ___ Everything was dark by the time I returned to. My braid was ruined, and darkness still clouded my vision. Mom is screaming at me, demanding to know if I had taken anything. The panic seizes control over me again, my hands trying to defend me from my own mind, tugging at my braid, wet with tears, sobbing as I realize I ruined it. I ruined it, I will pay with my blood for causing more shame for mom, and more trauma for my sister. Mom finally softens, something she hasn’t done for a long time. “I think you’re having a panic attack.”
0
Mar 8, 2021
Mar 8, 2021 at 7:17 PM UTC
RUN!
content warning: blood, violence, panic attack I sit in the emptiness of the family room by myself. Cradle my head in my hands, unable to close my eyes as they stare through the gaps between my fingers. Despite the still environment, my heart is racing alongside the thoughts: run or they’ll **** you, so much blood… The door opens despite the lock. So much BLOOD! Mother steps in, her boyfriend, my sister too, grandma and grandpa. Tears slip between my fingers, unwilling to be held behind my last sense of self-control. The lock failed, I'm terrified seeing the blood-driven amusement across their faces. “Look!” My sister calls, and I see the meat cleaver she’s holding slice through mom’s head. So much blood. Mom laughs from the floor. Grandfather holds a gun up to sister’s head, and then the pieces of her splattered across the walls laugh in crescendo. I’m different from them. They approach me now. I know I’ll die. I have no means of fighting back with these useless, shaky hands. Hands that inscribe their own pain into my cheeks, nails peeling the skin away as I panic. I’m going to die, and I scream like it. “Stay away from me!” So much blood. ___ Everything was dark by the time I returned to. My braid was ruined, and darkness still clouded my vision. Mom is screaming at me, demanding to know if I had taken anything. The panic seizes control over me again, my hands trying to defend me from my own mind, tugging at my braid, wet with tears, sobbing as I realize I ruined it. I ruined it, I will pay with my blood for causing more shame for mom, and more trauma for my sister. Mom finally softens, something she hasn’t done for a long time. “I think you’re having a panic attack.”
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66
I promise, I’m a good girl; I stay away from narcotics, alcohol, sin. Traditional stuff you’d find at parties: bustling, joyous laughter, celebrating their momentary acceptance. Girls my age are supposed to lose her individuality in the heat of the moment, find herself as the collective energy of the crowd, dance, fight, scream. They fight off the night’s darkness, silence, coldness, for the party’s brightness, sound, warmth. I remain alone, allowing the night’s emptiness to swallow me whole. Surrounded by darkness, I notice its layers— the infinite depths of reality threatening to tear us all apart. Just as anyone else, I’m not as good as I should be. Despite the comfort I have in barely keeping myself afloat, I want to feel something too. I drink energy drinks at night. Not so bad, right? I thought the same against my mother’s warning: "Never drink those!" Despite being able to recall coloring within the lines of a coloring book at a hospital: seeing my dad be pushed in a wheelchair out of the operation room. His spirit was stolen, and his heart would tick forever as a reminder. Compared to the other girls, I lose my individuality in the loneliness of the night, find myself in the emotionality night wraps me in: watch, listen, wait. My heart struggles to keep up as I drink more, more, more. I smile, and finally my thoughts run as quickly as my peers— beat, beat, beat. I’m tired of being a girl, of failing to live up to inhuman expectations, or fitting in with those sweaty bodies. I wish the glory of femininity didn’t end with girlhood. Instead of playing with human sensuality, I play with human mortality in what I’d like to call a college student’s version of Russian roulette.
0
Nov 20, 2020
Nov 20, 2020 at 1:51 AM UTC
caffeine is a drug too.
I promise, I’m a good girl; I stay away from narcotics, alcohol, sin. Traditional stuff you’d find at parties: bustling, joyous laughter, celebrating their momentary acceptance. Girls my age are supposed to lose her individuality in the heat of the moment, find herself as the collective energy of the crowd, dance, fight, scream. They fight off the night’s darkness, silence, coldness, for the party’s brightness, sound, warmth. I remain alone, allowing the night’s emptiness to swallow me whole. Surrounded by darkness, I notice its layers— the infinite depths of reality threatening to tear us all apart. Just as anyone else, I’m not as good as I should be. Despite the comfort I have in barely keeping myself afloat, I want to feel something too. I drink energy drinks at night. Not so bad, right? I thought the same against my mother’s warning: "Never drink those!" Despite being able to recall coloring within the lines of a coloring book at a hospital: seeing my dad be pushed in a wheelchair out of the operation room. His spirit was stolen, and his heart would tick forever as a reminder. Compared to the other girls, I lose my individuality in the loneliness of the night, find myself in the emotionality night wraps me in: watch, listen, wait. My heart struggles to keep up as I drink more, more, more. I smile, and finally my thoughts run as quickly as my peers— beat, beat, beat. I’m tired of being a girl, of failing to live up to inhuman expectations, or fitting in with those sweaty bodies. I wish the glory of femininity didn’t end with girlhood. Instead of playing with human sensuality, I play with human mortality in what I’d like to call a college student’s version of Russian roulette.
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60
warning: ****** assault, domestic violence Before: Daddy yells at momma. He’s upset that after she made me, she’s too tired to be with him. I step into the kitchen where my pieces of DNA were fighting. I had just started going to school, and I was too young to realize: kids really are helpless in situations like these. He shoves momma’s clothes off so quickly; I was paralyzed. I couldn’t move. I didn’t know what was going on. My momma screams in retaliation, “You ******* She’s right there!” I’ll never forget the cruel glint in his eyes. “She won’t remember.” Then: As a thirteen-year-old, I was braced for war. Momma told me: “Remember the pain I went through? Your father… Make him pay!” You’re right, momma. I know what you went through. I’m sorry I am still part of him. Empty bottles litter the floor just like the pictures of bodies in my history textbook. I stand from amongst them, glaring at him as he snores on the couch. At the time, I didn’t understand why dad would pass out so quickly sometimes. Carefully, I step over the bottles, making my way over to the sleeping beast. I’m scared he’ll wake up. Ah! Just like in my favorite books, the villain’s neck is wide open! I reach my hand out, clutching my pretend dagger— I **** him! With elation, I suddenly feel the curse that tied me to him leave. The steady rise and fall of his stomach brings my spirits back to reality. Disgust twists across my face, and I deliver a punch to his beer belly. He sputters, standing on his feet in a rage. “You— You’ll never understand what I went through!” My instinct is to run and hide, but I instead stand proudly, puffing out my chest. “I wish you were never my dad!” I smile to myself, giddy in hopes that momma would stop crying and be proud of me. He looks hurt by it. I’m happy! He never comforted us! I throw out a few curse words to try to scare him. That only makes him angry. “Get over ‘ere,” he says through gritted teeth. He grabs me by the waist of my pants. My momma is worth whatever he does to me! After: Preparing to graduate from college with high honors and a position at my dream job, I should be happy. Yet I can't help but realize it has been a decade since I’ve spoken to my dad. Mom is with a new man. He touches me in ways dad never did. If I was thirteen, I’d find the ten year anniversary as a reason to celebrate. “That much closer to removing his curse!” I would think. I’m even more disgusted by my mom spending all of her time with her boyfriend than I ever did when dad brought women over. If the curse is supposed to be disappearing, then why do I feel just as empty as I did before?
0
Nov 13, 2020
Nov 13, 2020 at 9:03 PM UTC
kid in a divorce: before, then, after.
warning: ****** assault, domestic violence Before: Daddy yells at momma. He’s upset that after she made me, she’s too tired to be with him. I step into the kitchen where my pieces of DNA were fighting. I had just started going to school, and I was too young to realize: kids really are helpless in situations like these. He shoves momma’s clothes off so quickly; I was paralyzed. I couldn’t move. I didn’t know what was going on. My momma screams in retaliation, “You ******* She’s right there!” I’ll never forget the cruel glint in his eyes. “She won’t remember.” Then: As a thirteen-year-old, I was braced for war. Momma told me: “Remember the pain I went through? Your father… Make him pay!” You’re right, momma. I know what you went through. I’m sorry I am still part of him. Empty bottles litter the floor just like the pictures of bodies in my history textbook. I stand from amongst them, glaring at him as he snores on the couch. At the time, I didn’t understand why dad would pass out so quickly sometimes. Carefully, I step over the bottles, making my way over to the sleeping beast. I’m scared he’ll wake up. Ah! Just like in my favorite books, the villain’s neck is wide open! I reach my hand out, clutching my pretend dagger— I **** him! With elation, I suddenly feel the curse that tied me to him leave. The steady rise and fall of his stomach brings my spirits back to reality. Disgust twists across my face, and I deliver a punch to his beer belly. He sputters, standing on his feet in a rage. “You— You’ll never understand what I went through!” My instinct is to run and hide, but I instead stand proudly, puffing out my chest. “I wish you were never my dad!” I smile to myself, giddy in hopes that momma would stop crying and be proud of me. He looks hurt by it. I’m happy! He never comforted us! I throw out a few curse words to try to scare him. That only makes him angry. “Get over ‘ere,” he says through gritted teeth. He grabs me by the waist of my pants. My momma is worth whatever he does to me! After: Preparing to graduate from college with high honors and a position at my dream job, I should be happy. Yet I can't help but realize it has been a decade since I’ve spoken to my dad. Mom is with a new man. He touches me in ways dad never did. If I was thirteen, I’d find the ten year anniversary as a reason to celebrate. “That much closer to removing his curse!” I would think. I’m even more disgusted by my mom spending all of her time with her boyfriend than I ever did when dad brought women over. If the curse is supposed to be disappearing, then why do I feel just as empty as I did before?
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98
Little betta fish, swimming around in its aquarium. I peer into the depths. Lose myself. I listlessly observe her for hours, watching her beautiful fins flare. She remains unbothered, going about her usual business. As I am locked in my room, and she is locked in hers, I consider her as my best friend. We’ve spent a lot of time together. I wish I could touch her or talk to her and tell her how much I appreciate her presence, but I don’t think she would understand. Although we stare at each other for hours through the glass panes separating our two worlds of air and water, I feel lonely. I’m terrified for the day when my only friend lies belly-up on the water surface. Will the loneliness drown me too?
0
Nov 3, 2020
Nov 3, 2020 at 4:21 PM UTC
lonely fish.
content warning: sexism, racism, homophobia, ableist slurs, ****** assault, alt-right political commentary, abuse, prostitution The okra stalks now wilted bend beneath the winds of America’s plains. As I’ve occupied myself with a Yankee college’s schoolwork, my means of feeding myself diminish as I don’t have the time or energy to water, **** the bad bugs, retie the plants to their rightful stalks, and finally clean myself off. Although my family qualifies for “government handouts” as my momma calls them, she sends it back every time. The price? Hunger gnawing at my stomach, basic needs left unmet, my “liberal” professors failing to grasp what their own students face. But women don’t deserve an actual education, because in America’s Bible Belt the woman’s future is confined to a Southern home full of sweat and pregnancies. I can always tell when my momma runs a deficit on bills. I can hear it, although I try not to— “Thank you for the tip, honey.” She drawls, and I know her bedroom door is locked. Before I knew what she was doing when I was too young to know— I caught glimpses of the different men as they’d leave. I don’t know why, but I hated them all. One would smoke cigarettes on the porch, and later I’d kick around the used butts. Now that she’s older, she has resulted to pimping me and my little sister out against our will— whether she intended for it to happen or not. I’ve come to understand that at least in America’s South, virginity doesn’t exist. A woman’s only purity lies within having the right skin color; some STDs can be overlooked as long as they can still populate the Southern landscapes. For the first time I had seen my momma in over two weeks, I greet her with a happy smile while washing dishes. Her look of disgust remains unchanged. “You need to register to vote!” She says, yet I don’t have my driver’s license. I remain silent. I can hear the political commentary over the radio: “String ‘em up, shoot ‘em down! Stop being so autistic, and abide by the Party doctrine!” Being in the South, I know what the Southern gentleman meant over the radio, yet I still find its charged language alarming. String ‘em up: Hang the Yankee professors who help me Shoot ‘em down: Put down the “rioters” and “looters” Autism refers to following rules of governance, and the Party… When my little sister registered as a lesbian liberal, momma never raised that much Hell. She went off with a man for a few days to cool off. I remember crying, kneeling before my nativity set and the cross in my room, hands clasped in prayer, begging God to inform me on what to do. I’ve tried to be a good Southern girl my whole life, despite not being white, being born into a single parent household, and living in poverty. I tried to be educated as a means of providing for my family. However, my grandma tells me that’s unnatural. My momma tells me to stop being stuck in my books and to get some fresh Southern air. I am left to ask, pleading for God to tell me as humanity itself has failed to help me: How can I be redeemed from the sin of being born?
0
Oct 13, 2020
Oct 13, 2020 at 9:14 PM UTC
southern living.
content warning: sexism, racism, homophobia, ableist slurs, ****** assault, alt-right political commentary, abuse, prostitution The okra stalks now wilted bend beneath the winds of America’s plains. As I’ve occupied myself with a Yankee college’s schoolwork, my means of feeding myself diminish as I don’t have the time or energy to water, **** the bad bugs, retie the plants to their rightful stalks, and finally clean myself off. Although my family qualifies for “government handouts” as my momma calls them, she sends it back every time. The price? Hunger gnawing at my stomach, basic needs left unmet, my “liberal” professors failing to grasp what their own students face. But women don’t deserve an actual education, because in America’s Bible Belt the woman’s future is confined to a Southern home full of sweat and pregnancies. I can always tell when my momma runs a deficit on bills. I can hear it, although I try not to— “Thank you for the tip, honey.” She drawls, and I know her bedroom door is locked. Before I knew what she was doing when I was too young to know— I caught glimpses of the different men as they’d leave. I don’t know why, but I hated them all. One would smoke cigarettes on the porch, and later I’d kick around the used butts. Now that she’s older, she has resulted to pimping me and my little sister out against our will— whether she intended for it to happen or not. I’ve come to understand that at least in America’s South, virginity doesn’t exist. A woman’s only purity lies within having the right skin color; some STDs can be overlooked as long as they can still populate the Southern landscapes. For the first time I had seen my momma in over two weeks, I greet her with a happy smile while washing dishes. Her look of disgust remains unchanged. “You need to register to vote!” She says, yet I don’t have my driver’s license. I remain silent. I can hear the political commentary over the radio: “String ‘em up, shoot ‘em down! Stop being so autistic, and abide by the Party doctrine!” Being in the South, I know what the Southern gentleman meant over the radio, yet I still find its charged language alarming. String ‘em up: Hang the Yankee professors who help me Shoot ‘em down: Put down the “rioters” and “looters” Autism refers to following rules of governance, and the Party… When my little sister registered as a lesbian liberal, momma never raised that much Hell. She went off with a man for a few days to cool off. I remember crying, kneeling before my nativity set and the cross in my room, hands clasped in prayer, begging God to inform me on what to do. I’ve tried to be a good Southern girl my whole life, despite not being white, being born into a single parent household, and living in poverty. I tried to be educated as a means of providing for my family. However, my grandma tells me that’s unnatural. My momma tells me to stop being stuck in my books and to get some fresh Southern air. I am left to ask, pleading for God to tell me as humanity itself has failed to help me: How can I be redeemed from the sin of being born?
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93
tw: mentionings of ****** assault, allusion to suicide, racism, abuse, sexism “I’m starving,” mom says, the empty void of the refrigerator reflecting the state of her consciousness. Little sister clutches at her stomach, as if willing her hunger away would make it disappear. I’ve made fine food, yet their tongues still decry their miserable states of hunger. Aren't men supposed to provide the food, a house, and authority? Aren’t women supposed to provide the meals, a home, and emotionality? My dad solely remains as DNA, threatening to make me into an alcoholic like him if I don’t behave. My mom’s boyfriend rules over us women with cruel dominion, making us wish we never had feelings since we just feel so violated. His Irish tongue has the scrutiny of the White Man’s burden over us colored women, his cruelty unmatched from the state of war. When he pulls on my hair, incessantly demanding my attention, I remember how he ruined my mom’s body after surgery, tearing her flesh apart freshly stitched together, and digs in, blood seeping the bedsheets. I was just trying to study. Trying to further my education of escaping from this Hell The Hell he threatens me with doesn’t seem so scary when I know the Price: being a part of his sick fantasy of having a harem of mother and daughters tortured and maimed by his hand, and our cries only met with his wails. He already has my mother sewn into his game of escaping Hell. She acts as his demon sometimes out of fear, reprimanding me for daring to keep my door shut for daring to not scream, keep my thighs together for him. My tongue strikes as my only act of defense in an effort not against him, but against a betrayal of self. I am hungry, in constant fear and panic, and am knowledgeable of both how his game functions and my inability to escape it. Tell me, how could Hell be any worse than this? As a ***** made by his hand, I acknowledge that my only way to Heaven: My Escape lies in sacrifice. As an ultimate display of familial piety to my mother and sister. I take a kitchen knife, pouring some rice onto a plate, before stabbing my stomach with the blade, watching as my flesh falls onto the steaming plate. Now, I admit with relief, I will go to Heaven, and I will not hear them go hungry! I declare in pure elation, feeling my consciousness previously weighed down by the burdens of a woman finally flying free from my twisted body. I watch from the clouds of Heaven, having made my sacrifice, and see flies collecting over my body; the plate is untouched. My halo wavers atop my head. “Please,” I whisper. “Don’t let my sacrifice be for nothing.” Sister has yet to leave her room. I recall feeling terrified myself when I was within the confines of mortality. Mom is— I see her. She’s eating. All this time— she was lying? The clouds fall from beneath me, and my wings are plucked, causing me to experience a pain that rivals the first time he tried me. I come back to life to witness firsthand him, with a pig-like glint in his eyes, gouging on the meal I had prepared. My stomach now sliding down his esophagus reels with hatred. On the brink of life and death once more, my vision flickers. I catch glimpses of the devil’s horns through his ***** blond hair. In my final moments, I am left to ask: Did Earth ever really exist in the first place?
0
Sep 29, 2020
Sep 29, 2020 at 2:51 AM UTC
Hell.
tw: mentionings of ****** assault, allusion to suicide, racism, abuse, sexism “I’m starving,” mom says, the empty void of the refrigerator reflecting the state of her consciousness. Little sister clutches at her stomach, as if willing her hunger away would make it disappear. I’ve made fine food, yet their tongues still decry their miserable states of hunger. Aren't men supposed to provide the food, a house, and authority? Aren’t women supposed to provide the meals, a home, and emotionality? My dad solely remains as DNA, threatening to make me into an alcoholic like him if I don’t behave. My mom’s boyfriend rules over us women with cruel dominion, making us wish we never had feelings since we just feel so violated. His Irish tongue has the scrutiny of the White Man’s burden over us colored women, his cruelty unmatched from the state of war. When he pulls on my hair, incessantly demanding my attention, I remember how he ruined my mom’s body after surgery, tearing her flesh apart freshly stitched together, and digs in, blood seeping the bedsheets. I was just trying to study. Trying to further my education of escaping from this Hell The Hell he threatens me with doesn’t seem so scary when I know the Price: being a part of his sick fantasy of having a harem of mother and daughters tortured and maimed by his hand, and our cries only met with his wails. He already has my mother sewn into his game of escaping Hell. She acts as his demon sometimes out of fear, reprimanding me for daring to keep my door shut for daring to not scream, keep my thighs together for him. My tongue strikes as my only act of defense in an effort not against him, but against a betrayal of self. I am hungry, in constant fear and panic, and am knowledgeable of both how his game functions and my inability to escape it. Tell me, how could Hell be any worse than this? As a ***** made by his hand, I acknowledge that my only way to Heaven: My Escape lies in sacrifice. As an ultimate display of familial piety to my mother and sister. I take a kitchen knife, pouring some rice onto a plate, before stabbing my stomach with the blade, watching as my flesh falls onto the steaming plate. Now, I admit with relief, I will go to Heaven, and I will not hear them go hungry! I declare in pure elation, feeling my consciousness previously weighed down by the burdens of a woman finally flying free from my twisted body. I watch from the clouds of Heaven, having made my sacrifice, and see flies collecting over my body; the plate is untouched. My halo wavers atop my head. “Please,” I whisper. “Don’t let my sacrifice be for nothing.” Sister has yet to leave her room. I recall feeling terrified myself when I was within the confines of mortality. Mom is— I see her. She’s eating. All this time— she was lying? The clouds fall from beneath me, and my wings are plucked, causing me to experience a pain that rivals the first time he tried me. I come back to life to witness firsthand him, with a pig-like glint in his eyes, gouging on the meal I had prepared. My stomach now sliding down his esophagus reels with hatred. On the brink of life and death once more, my vision flickers. I catch glimpses of the devil’s horns through his ***** blond hair. In my final moments, I am left to ask: Did Earth ever really exist in the first place?
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141
warning: mentioning of suicide This apology is long overdue, but I’ve been meaning to say I’m sorry. I’ll never forget when you were sitting next to me. Mom was in the room too and you were browsing on your phone with a smile on your face until your world shatters. Panic. You panic, and I don’t understand. Mom’s attention is still on the television as you begin to cry. “What’s wrong?” I ask, but my harsh tone seemed more like a demand. “Evan!” You scream, and it finally catches mom’s attention. “Evan’s in the hospital!” ***** I begin, feeling powerless at the sight of your bright red face. I can’t stand seeing you cry. I am curious to know why— “He’ll be fine.” Mom intervenes, voice gentle despite the sharp underlying tone most single parents have when addressing their crying child. “Do they know what happened?” “No,” you respond, and you’re now finding it difficult to breathe. I look to mom for guidance as I want her to know that it’ll be okay. “It can’t be that serious.” Your phone pings. I’ll never forget how the color drained from your face, jaw slack in horror. It takes your body a second as the shock runs through the nerves in your body, and you sob into your palms. “What?!” Mom screams. We both jump. You reply, voice hardly above a whisper, “H-he tried to…” Your voice falls lower. “He tried to—“ Mom’s visage softens. “Honey,” she says, holding her arms out for a hug. “Now, what happened with your little friend?” With your lips muffled against her shoulder, you reply, “He tried to **** himself.” Your whole body quivers with sobs. I remain seated in the same place, ignoring the tears running down my cheeks. “I’m sure he’ll be fine, ***** Mom joins in. “Yes honey, he’s young. He’ll come back.” It takes a while to convince you, but then you finally come to. I remember smiling and thinking, Yeah, he’ll get better later. __ “You were wrong!” You scream at me nearly a week later one morning. I jump, unaware of what happened. I’m surprised, seeing you so upset. “What did I do?!” I shout, confused as I hold up my hands to mask my face from you. “You. Lied!” You shout, sobbing into your palms wearing your childhood nightgown printed with purple stripes, now faded after so many washes. ***** I ask, and I reach my arms out for a hug. You slap my wrists away, glaring at me through the tears in your eyes. Stunned, I pause, and you respond, “They took him off life support today! You lied!" I tried to apologize then, and it took a few tries until you said you accepted them. However, apologies will never make it the same.
0
Sep 20, 2020
Sep 20, 2020 at 1:35 AM UTC
i'm sorry.
warning: mentioning of suicide This apology is long overdue, but I’ve been meaning to say I’m sorry. I’ll never forget when you were sitting next to me. Mom was in the room too and you were browsing on your phone with a smile on your face until your world shatters. Panic. You panic, and I don’t understand. Mom’s attention is still on the television as you begin to cry. “What’s wrong?” I ask, but my harsh tone seemed more like a demand. “Evan!” You scream, and it finally catches mom’s attention. “Evan’s in the hospital!” ***** I begin, feeling powerless at the sight of your bright red face. I can’t stand seeing you cry. I am curious to know why— “He’ll be fine.” Mom intervenes, voice gentle despite the sharp underlying tone most single parents have when addressing their crying child. “Do they know what happened?” “No,” you respond, and you’re now finding it difficult to breathe. I look to mom for guidance as I want her to know that it’ll be okay. “It can’t be that serious.” Your phone pings. I’ll never forget how the color drained from your face, jaw slack in horror. It takes your body a second as the shock runs through the nerves in your body, and you sob into your palms. “What?!” Mom screams. We both jump. You reply, voice hardly above a whisper, “H-he tried to…” Your voice falls lower. “He tried to—“ Mom’s visage softens. “Honey,” she says, holding her arms out for a hug. “Now, what happened with your little friend?” With your lips muffled against her shoulder, you reply, “He tried to **** himself.” Your whole body quivers with sobs. I remain seated in the same place, ignoring the tears running down my cheeks. “I’m sure he’ll be fine, ***** Mom joins in. “Yes honey, he’s young. He’ll come back.” It takes a while to convince you, but then you finally come to. I remember smiling and thinking, Yeah, he’ll get better later. __ “You were wrong!” You scream at me nearly a week later one morning. I jump, unaware of what happened. I’m surprised, seeing you so upset. “What did I do?!” I shout, confused as I hold up my hands to mask my face from you. “You. Lied!” You shout, sobbing into your palms wearing your childhood nightgown printed with purple stripes, now faded after so many washes. ***** I ask, and I reach my arms out for a hug. You slap my wrists away, glaring at me through the tears in your eyes. Stunned, I pause, and you respond, “They took him off life support today! You lied!" I tried to apologize then, and it took a few tries until you said you accepted them. However, apologies will never make it the same.
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118
cw: ****** assault, assault, abuse, slurs, chronic pain It began with you doing his laundry, shouting back at him, “Not an ounce of romanticism!” Swears follow after beneath your breath. I stand in the same hallway watching your shadow stretch through the doorframe of the laundry room, water gushing from the machine into a cacophonous roar. I wait, but I remain unnoticed as you turn, legs bare, and go into the bedroom. I return to my own bedroom, separated by the war zones of the empty pantry and cluttered den— unpaid bills lay strewn around, the stuff he brought in from when he first ruined our lives sitting, watching, collecting dust. Lottery tickets with their surfaces scratched away and forgotten, just like your dreamscapes. I pause, thirsty. I dare to step outside, but I stop when I hear your moans. I’ve had enough experience to after a few seconds deduce if the moans are from forced *** or chronic pain. He laughs. It’s the former this time. I pause, shaking. Does it not infuriate you like how it does to me? You’re my mother, and I’m your daughter. He’s your boyfriend, and he’s both of our assaulters, abusers. When you first asked me if I was okay with you finding me a “new dad,” you never asked me if it was okay if he It’s just been “One more month, one more month,” for years. I’m so tired of your performative screams because we both know from experience if you don’t scream well enough, he’ll beat you and seek me instead. People from outside said you're supposed to teach me to be a woman instead of a **** But I am instead left alone, asking, "Does my mom still love me?" What a romantic play you've put on-- to manage to fool those who love you the most certainly isn't easy.
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Sep 14, 2020
Sep 14, 2020 at 12:09 AM UTC
romance.
cw: ****** assault, assault, abuse, slurs, chronic pain It began with you doing his laundry, shouting back at him, “Not an ounce of romanticism!” Swears follow after beneath your breath. I stand in the same hallway watching your shadow stretch through the doorframe of the laundry room, water gushing from the machine into a cacophonous roar. I wait, but I remain unnoticed as you turn, legs bare, and go into the bedroom. I return to my own bedroom, separated by the war zones of the empty pantry and cluttered den— unpaid bills lay strewn around, the stuff he brought in from when he first ruined our lives sitting, watching, collecting dust. Lottery tickets with their surfaces scratched away and forgotten, just like your dreamscapes. I pause, thirsty. I dare to step outside, but I stop when I hear your moans. I’ve had enough experience to after a few seconds deduce if the moans are from forced *** or chronic pain. He laughs. It’s the former this time. I pause, shaking. Does it not infuriate you like how it does to me? You’re my mother, and I’m your daughter. He’s your boyfriend, and he’s both of our assaulters, abusers. When you first asked me if I was okay with you finding me a “new dad,” you never asked me if it was okay if he It’s just been “One more month, one more month,” for years. I’m so tired of your performative screams because we both know from experience if you don’t scream well enough, he’ll beat you and seek me instead. People from outside said you're supposed to teach me to be a woman instead of a **** But I am instead left alone, asking, "Does my mom still love me?" What a romantic play you've put on-- to manage to fool those who love you the most certainly isn't easy.
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Hungry for something I have never seen before, my eager eyes scour pages of books. Opening several books, I marvel at the lives and stories of true artisans of their time: Xiao Hong, Joy Harjo, and William Faulkner. I stare at each page, trying to digest every word and imitate their style; however, my mind draws blank the moment the blank document reflects back into my empty mind. Suddenly intrusive thoughts rise to the forefront of my consciousness. “How dare you think you could ever become a hero like them without a single reader?” I finally surmise that I’m not a poet, artist, or author. I don’t have the soulless apartment flat in the middle of a bustling city, finding muse in every corner of life. Nor do I have the freedom to explore outside’s blank landscapes as there’s a spike of missing women reports here. Instead, I live in my empty childhood home, bedroom walls plastered with heroes from video games as I hide away from my mom’s boyfriend. Afraid of both the outside and inside world, I remain still. I am no writer. I am no hero.
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Sep 6, 2020
Sep 6, 2020 at 11:23 PM UTC
i am no writer.