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sarah-gray-isenberg
sarah-gray-isenberg
Joshua Tree, CA I write solely prose poetry, and the content is a reflection of my experiences. I try and write a poem a day. All poems are written in my phone when I am on the go. I am a desert soul.
They told me that writing Triggers catharsis That words would help me Make peace with everything I was And wasn’t I tried so hard To write what I felt But the irony became that No words suffice to articulate My sadness; This weight speaks A different Language No one can understand
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May 27, 2018
May 27, 2018 at 6:44 PM UTC
Making Peace
Grief is born in the monotony. It reminds you of its presence every time you Look at a light switch or the fridge door or the grout between the cold tiles because these things were the first to witness your storm your hurricane The tears That burned the inner Areas Of your thighs Before leaving small Pools on the Condo floor No. That doorknob will Never be just a Doorknob Again. You see, It was the last thing I Touched Before I stumbled Into my Room and pried Myself from the floor that Held me. It was then I realized 8 years was just 8 years, And those beautiful Moments were ones you wouldn’t Miss. It was all I could do To soak my grief In the threads of The sheets To weave a tapestry Of my sorrow on My twin bed. Not one that I owned Just one that I borrowed And for so long After I apologized For staining the frame with My anguish For burying my memories In its springs And my doubts In its hinges That’s where I left Everything On the 1sr of August. All those aches that gnawed at my bones and thrashed skin and stripped my eyes Dry till they pulsed bloodshot Orbs in my head Pivoting, pivoting Till they Closed Exhausted and weary From struggle oh honey bird, At times like these Remember, The monotony has Made you. You are a polished Stone Smoothed by Turbulence.
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May 27, 2018
May 27, 2018 at 6:29 PM UTC
Polished Stone
Mama told me Beauty laps at my skin And youth is wasted By my ingratitude But I was too tired to see it I was 23 Now I'm 25 And I've died a thousand times Over By this point. That night I blew the candles Like I was supposed to Greeted the guests Shared cake with them Under a sky so Swollen with stars So burgeoning with promise Then I walked them to their cars Gave hugs and thanks Like I was taught. But mama never taught me That niceties are only Skin-deep That happiness Is as cosmetic as my cover girl concealer And I can apply it to My skin to Cover the blemishes of My pain Carved between my Freckles Scars that Hang under my eyes like Eternal exhaustion. Yes, I was alright that night. Alright, being relative Which just Meant that I was suffering A little less. A term that meant That a Pabst and some Hard lemonade and My birthday champagne Would ease. It meant that my inhibitions Would soften my Anguish And my sharp edges Would rounded Into lovely Curves Soft enough for a man To touch. And I did. I let that man touch me On my happy day. For so long I have Trivialized my own Pain, pretending it Didn’t exist Burying it into My darkest recesses Hiding it in my mattress And under my pillows. You see, I have built walls Even too high for me To climb. So I sat there On my birthday With the candles And the lights All turning, turning Red cups luring Us into a suspended Stupor. All bellies bloated with Good company. Ah, how nice it was. That night I watched My life through The window Outside Like I could see Happiness Painted on my Face While inquietude Sat in my Chest Strangling my Progress The sadness Plaguing the Recesses of my Mind I grieved: “I’ve made it so Far, So please Don’t go back now.” I inhaled Deeply And allowed myself To be drowned by my own Breath, And I blew. And I said Happy birthday to me.
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May 27, 2018
May 27, 2018 at 6:29 PM UTC
HB
Mama told me Beauty laps at my skin And youth is wasted By my ingratitude But I was too tired to see it I was 23 Now I'm 25 And I've died a thousand times Over By this point. That night I blew the candles Like I was supposed to Greeted the guests Shared cake with them Under a sky so Swollen with stars So burgeoning with promise Then I walked them to their cars Gave hugs and thanks Like I was taught. But mama never taught me That niceties are only Skin-deep That happiness Is as cosmetic as my cover girl concealer And I can apply it to My skin to Cover the blemishes of My pain Carved between my Freckles Scars that Hang under my eyes like Eternal exhaustion. Yes, I was alright that night. Alright, being relative Which just Meant that I was suffering A little less. A term that meant That a Pabst and some Hard lemonade and My birthday champagne Would ease. It meant that my inhibitions Would soften my Anguish And my sharp edges Would rounded Into lovely Curves Soft enough for a man To touch. And I did. I let that man touch me On my happy day. For so long I have Trivialized my own Pain, pretending it Didn’t exist Burying it into My darkest recesses Hiding it in my mattress And under my pillows. You see, I have built walls Even too high for me To climb. So I sat there On my birthday With the candles And the lights All turning, turning Red cups luring Us into a suspended Stupor. All bellies bloated with Good company. Ah, how nice it was. That night I watched My life through The window Outside Like I could see Happiness Painted on my Face While inquietude Sat in my Chest Strangling my Progress The sadness Plaguing the Recesses of my Mind I grieved: “I’ve made it so Far, So please Don’t go back now.” I inhaled Deeply And allowed myself To be drowned by my own Breath, And I blew. And I said Happy birthday to me.
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I have been the Writer of This melancholic narrative Authored from an Illness I am not proud to Bear But it is a testament To the threads of my resilience Forged out of Steel That I have sewn my limbs back To my body with All those days I Fell apart I am ready to Welcome the angst Of starting over I am ready to invite the Silence Back in Like that perfect moment Between the Lightening and thunder A moment so impenetrable and void of Sound I’m ready for that absence And I am ready to stop shaming Myself for my sadness
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May 27, 2018
May 27, 2018 at 6:24 PM UTC
Shame
Boys Ask me Why I can’t cook And keep a house And I tell them My mother Spent my childhood Teaching me What it meant To be a bigger Man than Even they Learned to be
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May 27, 2018
May 27, 2018 at 6:21 PM UTC
Girls Raised By Moms
The night he told me He was 25 And had to get married To someone other Than me We were sitting In a Home Depot Parking lot At 9 pm And the street lamps Burned Above us In their Usual neon haze And the moon Silhouetted Our faces on The car windows And the breeze Turned leaves Over and over In its soft palms And I thought How cruel Of the world To continue On so ceaselessly As my love Dissolved Into memory –pondering the dissolution of my interracial love, Sarah Gray Isenberg June 2016
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May 27, 2018
May 27, 2018 at 6:20 PM UTC
Dissolution
I wore my past Like a pallid memoir Anguish carved Into the corners of my Eyes And the creases Of my forehead Are etched in a Reckless cursive And their words Read as a letter To the ingénue Lover I used to Be
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May 27, 2018
May 27, 2018 at 6:20 PM UTC
Ingenue Lover
"Girls ask me Why they haven’t seen Me shower But a few times And I say my body Is itself When i let it be Their discrete implication that a woman’s Body Is only valuable When it is Starched And disinfected When the sheaths Of hair and oils Are stripped from The skin Leaving it bare And defenseless But I guess it makes Sense Since we have been Taught That we are only Precious If we are vulnerable
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May 27, 2018
May 27, 2018 at 6:19 PM UTC
Growing Up a Girl
They said our 20s were supposed to be easy They never said that i would have to Count backwards from one hundred to Curb a breakdown They said sedation will calm you Down But no one ever considered That my neuroticism is what gave Me my power to write No one prepared me for the nights I dont remember For the car accidents that happened But never really happened The accidents that only existed as scars On my car That my splintered mirrors Only showed a fraction of my illness I was never supposed to be the person To leave the party early Because there was an anomaly in the wallpaper I was unable to ignore No one prepares you for the enemies You make of yourself Or the holes in your memory Where your dignity leaks out I never knew I could tell the time By counting my tears on my tile floor And that springs of my Bed would twang the sad anthem id never sing Because i was bloated with The probability that My anxiety was Scrawled on my skin That my anguish was apparent And my life floated in a glass Half empty And ever-transparent I believed No one would want to be with Someone with so much baggage I had to check in in order to get on a plane Ive spent my 20s on the verge of Implosion I was never meant to Crave sterility And the absence of emotion What if my mispoken words Were perfectly aligned With the trajectory of my life And that I was meant to Teach people Through this story That even the “Wrong words come Out right”
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May 27, 2018
May 27, 2018 at 6:18 PM UTC
Early 20s
The only Time I learned Of your sadness I read it like Braille On your body It was Knitted in Your muscles Carved into Your face Woven into Your hands And it made me Sad to think That our Unseen horrors Like Silence And loss Are such palpable Afflictions Our bodies Bear –learning how to heal myself, Sarah Gray Isenberg July 2016
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May 27, 2018
May 27, 2018 at 6:14 PM UTC
Bodies that Bear