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 May 2016
Chrissy Cosgrove
there are so many things that have gone to waste.

if there is no Man to hear the tree in the forest as it falls,
as it crashes to the soft and earthy floor
dragging down small saplings, trees-to-be
scattering small colonies of ants
smashing weak collections of petals and leaves into the dirt
uprooting the birds nestled in its branches
all in one moment,
does it make a sound?

or is it a silent collapse of life?

i wonder if the gun made a sound as it went off
i wonder if you were silent as you fell
 May 2016
Chrissy Cosgrove
we both watched them run until their bodies became to frail to function
they wore themselves out and broke themselves down into nothing
we behaved as if bystanders to some gruesome accident in the making
powerless in our capability to rescue,
but burdened with the weight of survivor’s guilt all the same

we both watched them run faster than we could keep up with
their arms pumped by their sides, their elbows shoving us away
we called out to them, we screamed:
"aren’t you getting tired yet?"
but our words were lost in the dust they created

we both watched them run farther away from us,
farther away from the unknown they were searching for so desperately
we both watched them run until there was nothing left to see
 May 2016
Chrissy Cosgrove
time is not static and i am no longer six years old
but sometimes i still feel like that
i want you to know that life means something different to me
than it ever did to you

i want you to know that i wish i could control everything
and make everyone feel okay
i want you to know that when people say that time heals all wounds,
they’re not telling the truth
ten years is a long time to wait for something like that to happen

i still entertain myself with the “what if” game
and if you have ever done that
then you know just as well as i do that it doesn’t get you anywhere
i want you to know some of the things that go on in my head
because for some reason i think you are the only person who could understand

what if you didn’t own a gun
what if i was a better daughter
what if the string of events that led up to you leaving this earth forever
didn’t happen

what if you saw me now and you were disappointed
in who i am, what i have done, and where i have ended up
what if it wasn’t a mistake or a regret
what if this is what you actually wanted

i’m sorry that sometimes life seemed like a jumbled mess
of heartache and regret and things that don’t make sense
i’m sorry that you spent so long chasing after something
that would have never made you feel okay
i’m sorry that you felt as if you had to drown your brilliance with substance
instead of just seeing it for what it was

i will not label your absence
or claim to know where you have moved on to
i can only hope that there is something more
than everything you were so desperate to escape
i hope that wherever you are, there is no one to tell you to turn your music down
and there’s never a day where you feel like something’s missing
i hope you’re not running anymore
and i hope that you never feel like you have to again
 May 2016
Chrissy Cosgrove
maybe compassion can only be found in the pain of opening your eyes each morning
maybe it is the ache of getting out of bed
lay back down,
the world doesn’t want you today

maybe compassion can only be found in losing who you are each night
maybe it is looking into the mirror with bloodshot eyes
and thinking that you are your father’s daughter
for the first time, this shames you

maybe compassion can only be found in self-inflicted misery
maybe it is a certain kind of hurt
that seems to always manifest itself on soft skin and darkened eyes
stop and ask yourself if this is what you want

maybe the word ‘selfish’ means something different now
and settling for leading a life of comfortable boredom sounds far less appealing
find parallels between the man you’ve struck down
and who you’ve become in the past decade

maybe it took so much more than you ever thought it would
to see that years of chasing after something you don’t want can be very exhausting
out of breath with blistered heels
and everything you’ve never wanted just out of reach,
ideas of right versus wrong become skewed and irrelevant

maybe sometimes people get tired of running
but maybe sometimes they don’t know how to stop
everyone is tired
i’m sorry i didn’t hold on to you tight enough
 May 2016
Chrissy Cosgrove
you can’t feel regret with a bullet through your head
you can’t wake up to the smell of stale *****
or see FAILURE printed on your forehead in the mirror
or hear your own thoughts that seem to be in such greater quantities than everyone else’s

it’s the best solution for a hangover
the cure for the worst headaches
an end to all thoughts that seem to be in direct contact with whatever makes your stomach twist
            your chest tighten
            your palms sweat
            your eyes well up

the list of pros and cons is dramatically lopsided
force yourself not to think of the look in her eyes when she sees you every other weekend
block out the sound of their laughter when it’s 3am and no one can sleep
put blinders on: see tomorrow
                          see the day after
                          see disappointment and regret and broken bottles
                          because sometimes you stumble

only then will you be able to give yourself the right answer
when you ask, “would that be so hard to walk away from?”
 May 2016
Chrissy Cosgrove
i’ve been lying here
for weeks now

my fingernails stopped growing
after reaching quite an amazing length
they’ve turned yellow and brittle
and would surely break if i tried to use them

my hair brushes just below my waist now
but it’s a dull shade of grey
and each day, a bit more falls off
any gust of wind whisks more away

my bones are frail
cracking and breaking and turning to dust
serving no purpose
and proving to be useless after all

my skin is beginning to waste away
which isn’t really a shame
seeing as it’s become a sickly pale color
and everything underneath it is broken

where did you go?
weren’t you lying here with me?

i have allowed maggots
to burrow inside my vacant eye sockets
and rats to pick at my flesh
vultures have ravaged my insides
and it really doesn’t bother me

will you be frightened by the way i look
or scared away by the smell?

the foliage that has grown around me
obscures what little there is left of me
but you remember where i was when you left
and you will know where to look

i hear footsteps sometimes
but it’s never you

i’ve been lying here
for quite some time now
maybe it’s been more than weeks
i’ve lost track of the sun rising and setting

where did you go?
weren’t you lying here with me?
 May 2016
Chrissy Cosgrove
a letter without a return address
because i don’t want to hear what you have to say

i’m not interested in an apology
a declaration of love
or any other revolting platitude that means nothing
there is no explanation
that could put right
everything that went wrong
i will be bitter
and i will never let it go

a letter without a return address
because i know you don’t care enough to say anything back

i will pour my heart out on paper
however repulsed i might be by the mess
i will hold nothing back
because it doesn’t matter what you think anymore

a letter without a return address
because i do not want you to think that i am waiting

i do not want you to know that i spend every day
stuck in the same spot
replaying the same moments in my head
and feeling worse each time
i do not want you to know that i would give anything
to go back and change everything
before it ever went wrong
i do not want you to know that i am waiting
even though there will be no reply

i am sending a letter without a return address
please try to find me anyway
 May 2016
Chrissy Cosgrove
i hated packing that maroon duffel bag
because i knew it meant
that the next three days would be different
and i wanted everything to stay the same
he would open the front door
and smile
even though he wasn’t happy
and invite me in
even though i wasn’t welcome

i didn’t understand why he lied to me
without even speaking
 May 2016
Chrissy Cosgrove
i could have done something different
i could have done something better
i could have helped you
i could have saved you
i could have taken your pain
worn it on my shoulders
and took your burdens for you
i could have wiped your tears away
poured the ***** down the drain
locked up the shotgun
and sang you to sleep
only in the morning you would still be there

i could have done something different
i could have done something better
i could have been there for you
i could have fixed what made you hurt
and made you forget about it
i could have held your hand
let you cry to me
soothed your aching heart with comforting words
and taken you away from everything
that changed you
maybe if i did
you would still be here

the same mistakes of idleness
and the same outcome
the same sharp sorrow and tortuous guilt
the same irreplaceable loss that i couldn’t stop

the same **** words that float in my head
enough times that i convince myself they’re true
i could have done something different
i could have done something better
and because i didn’t
i’m the only one left to tell myself that
 May 2016
Chrissy Cosgrove
'forget about the things that weigh you down'
he said
'and fly away'
he spoke as if he was not a prisoner
as if he were not shackled to depression
stuck on hopelessness
addicted to false relief
committed to failure

blind to his brilliance
his potential
his worth
held back by a false hope
the idea that freedom can only be found in death

impulsivity
alcohol
and misery
proved to be a fatal combination
and one gunshot took away everything

gone is the intelligence
the talent and wisdom
the ease of his company
gone is the understanding smile
the homemade turkey burgers
and the smell of listerine and cigarettes
nothing to look forward to
but silent Jets games
weekends with mom
and a hole in the rest of my life
always something missing
always something that’s not quite right

gone is the comfort
the safety
everything i thought i could always rely on
and everything that could have been
what did you mean by flying away?
 May 2016
Chrissy Cosgrove
When I was 8 years old, my second favorite place in the whole world was the Campbell Public Library. I liked to go in by myself because I was treated like a grown-up even though I wasn’t. I would walk into the fiction section, walking up and down each of the aisles and stopping to look at anything that caught my eye. If I couldn’t find a particular book I wanted, I would use the library computer to look it up and if I couldn’t reach something that looked interesting I would get a chair to stand on top of. I would carry a towering stack of books by authors like Judy Blume and Meg Cabot to the checkout counter, feeling very adult as I used my very own library card and successfully held a polite conversation with the librarian and told her yes, I would like a receipt please because I liked how the due date for my books was written on it. I found my mom parked in her Mercedes Benz convertible that cost far less than she wanted people to think and we would drive back to our house with her desperately trying to fill the five minutes with the sort of conversation that is normal for a mother and her daughter, except unlike most normal mothers and daughters, her understanding of me as a human being went as far as my name, age, and that I was full of wasted potential even as a third grader. She liked to say, “The apple don’t fall too far from the tree,” but I could tell she was disappointed. Every time we were about to pull into the driveway, I would unbuckle my seatbelt in eagerness to escape into the half-dozen books on my lap and every time without fail my mother would ask me where the fire was. It was a stupid expression and I resented it a little more every time I heard her say it. My first favorite place in the whole world awaited me in my bedroom, a snug corner on top of my dresser where I always kept some blankets and pillows for the hours I would spend up there post-library visit. It was a tight space, perhaps a little bit precarious, but it was quiet and it was safe and whenever my mom would come in to check on me (every few hours or so), she wouldn’t know where I was. You would think that after spending the majority of my time on this specific spot on top of my dresser, she would one day figure out that if she doesn’t immediately see me that I would be there like I am every other time she entered my room. But like most things, she ignored what she observed and I could not find it in me to be amused at her ditzy incompetence. Directly across from my dresser was a window with a view of an aspen tree, frequently inhabited by birds who would sit on the birdfeeder that I made a point to fill every few days and squirrels who would scurry up and down the trunk, occasionally pausing to look curiously at me. I liked sitting on top of my dresser and watching them because if you stared for long enough, one of the squirrels would do something really funny like stand on its hind legs to eat from the bird feeder. When something like this would happen, I would call for my mom so she could watch with me but she looked at what I was looking at wrong and didn’t understand. Sometimes if I watched for too long, I would start thinking about things that weren’t birds or squirrels or aspen trees or Judy Blume books. Sometimes if I watched for too long, I would get really sad because it was a Saturday that I should be spending with my dad, whose understanding of me as a human being went much farther than my name, age, and the false idea that I was full of wasted potential even as a third grader. If my dad walked into my room, the first place he would look would be on top of my dresser. He wouldn’t ask me what I was reading or if I was hungry or if I would come out and be social; he would watch the birds and the squirrels with me and he would understand.

— The End —