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Good grades — that’s what they wanted.
But I don’t have them.
I failed.
I have to repeat.
That’s all they see.
A number.
A score.
Never me.
I live in this house —
someone who isn’t my father,
a mother who doesn’t understand,
a grandma losing her mind.
Perfect, right?
Does love have requirements, I ask.
I know I’m not enough —
not for you, not for anyone.
If I’m not good on paper,
am I good at all?
Am I not a person?
I ask myself this
while drowning in pills,
begging my mind to stop.
Am I not good enough?
Would I be worth something
if I didn’t fail?
My father —
this stranger I’m supposed to run to.
He asks, Do you want to leave?
How can I answer
when my heart splits apart
like glass under my feet?
I step on my own pieces —
I bleed.
Why do I have to change my whole life
for you —
when you’ve never changed for me?
You say you’ll give me a good life,
but will you give me a father?
Will you be someone
I can stand beside and say,
This is my dad,
without lying to myself?
When will I stop being scared
to speak to you?
To let you see me —
just me —
no mask, no makeup.
You’re just a stranger
with my blood in your veins.
A stranger called Dad.
It’s July 11th.
I failed.
I have to do it all again —
same walls, same people,
same empty room.
No one gets it.
No one knows how death sits beside me,
laughing at my grades,
at my tears,
at my fear.
A bottle of pills on my bed —
my best friend.
How many times have I wanted out?
Too many.
When I cry, it’s not just tears —
it’s my heart trying to claw its way out.
I don’t want to cry.
I don’t want to look weak.
I don’t want to be this —
this failure, this disappointment,
this girl too scared to jump
but too tired to stay.
Sixteen years —
and every single year
I keep that little kid alive —
the one who dreamed
of being good,
of making everyone proud.
If she saw me now,
she’d feel so ashamed.
She’d want to hide me
like a stain on her dress.
No one gets it.
No one will.
I feel trapped in my own skin.
I feel the air leave me.
I want to run —
but I can’t move.
I want to jump —
but I’m scared to fall.
So I drink the pills anyway,
thinking maybe, just maybe,
I’ll slip away quiet.
But then I remember her —
that kid who laughed,
who played tag in the sun,
who believed love
didn’t have requirements.
But that’s her —
not me.
She’s gone.
Is she gone?
God, I don’t know.
I wish someone would hear me —
just once —
hear how it feels
to fail at being who they want.
If I’m not an A student,
I’m nothing.
If I don’t measure up,
I don’t deserve to feel.
It’s never enough —
never will be.
Sure, I failed a grade —
but I haven’t failed at living.
Not yet.
And I wish
one day
I will.
Love,
Modistica.
I hate is here
0 · 7d
The Box
I can go,
but I can’t.
I can stay,
but I can’t.
I’m trapped in a box.
I can’t see anything.
No one sees me.
No one hears me.
They say they listen —
but they don’t.
They say they care —
but they don’t.
They try —
but it never matters.
No one gets me,
but they pretend they do.
They talk,
but not to me.
They look,
but not at me.
They never see this box.
All the happy days
the happy moments,
they’re out there —
never in here.
Not one good thing fits in this box.
It’s always a box.
The light is out there —
so far away.
I only see it when I’m good,
when I’m quiet,
when I obey.
If I don’t,
the box shrinks.
It presses into my chest,
steals my air.
No space.
No air.
No light.
No room for me.
It’s always so dark,
but somehow so bright outside —
just not here.
Scary nights alone.
Happy days I can’t reach.
Everything is dark.
Everything is small.
I can’t breathe.
No one comes.
No one helps.
They’re not here.
They don’t see the walls closing in,
the walls scratching my skin,
my lungs empty,
my head spinning.
When do I get out?
Do I have to follow every rule?
Do I have to twist myself small
just to leave?
Why can’t I make my own box?
Paint it with colors.
Punch holes in it.
Why does it have to look like theirs?
Why do I have to drag it around
when it only drags me down?
Where is the help?
The ones who promise
to make my box bigger —
to give me air —
where are they?
Not here.
Never here.
They don’t understand
how heavy this box is.
They can’t hear me
screaming in it.
They don’t want to hear.
They don’t want to see.
im tired of actually everything

— The End —