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Haley Rezac Oct 2013
Although your cheek is
my only canvas today
(My lips the paintbrush)
I love you all the same.

*And paintbrushes slip
towards lips, sometimes.
Haley Rezac Oct 2013
Little girl
hears them
yelling
wraps herself
up
in warm blankets
(music can't
block this one
out)
little girl
cringes
her Mommy's
so fragile
he's breaking her
in half
with words
little girl is
angry
clenches her
fists
grabs her
combat boots
by the bedroom
door
she dresses
warm
puts on
a hoodie
stitched in
memories
grabs mittens
for her
tiny hands
little girl
grabs her
purse
looks in her
mirror
doesn't register
who the hell
she sees
if anyone
is even there
at all
opens her
door
storms right
past her
yelling
guardians
hot tears
bloom
spill on
her cheeks
sliding door
slams shut
bam
little girl
looks up
into icy rain
doesn't look
back
walks down
hard gravel
friendlier than
home
and
little girl
is
gone
.
Haley Rezac Oct 2013
I folded your hoodie neatly
set it in a brown paper bag
addressed to you

it doesn't have
the smell of your cologne
anymore
--it probably smells like dryer sheets
and fresh towels.

The last time it smelled like you
was the beginning of september
the only thing comforting me
when I walked down those
white, unfamiliar halls

I really hope that you don't notice
the absence of those red laces
looped through the neck of it
--the nurses wouldn't allow any strings
(shoelaces, lanyards,                                                      
others of the like)                                                          
because potential nooses
are a hazard to my health
                      (who knew?)                                        

I held so tightly to that hoodie
each night I slept in a plastic cot
                            (four nights. four.)                              
and even after your smell faded
even after its embrace simmered down to something so faint,
it was still my only comfort:
a shining beacon
in the gray fog of my hazy mind

I'm finally returning it
to you
and along with it,
the safety embedded in each stitch

I just really hope you don't realize
the absence of those red laces
looped through the neck of it;
it's not what's missing
that's important
but the way it kept me
from giving in
at my lowest point.
Haley Rezac Oct 2013
Do you not know that in every spec of dust
and in each groove carved into the floor
and in all the etches of your skin
there is a grand momentum
building up, waiting to collide
with the essence of you and I in mind,
like the intricacy of your fingernails
digging down
                      down
                               down
into the soul with the speed of light
and only you and I
               you and I in mind
hoping to send us to expressions portraying nothing
--the numbness! the abyss!--
It notices us screaming
but it doesn't give a ****
and in every spec of dust
and in each groove carved into the floor
and in all the etches of your skin
a growing force is inching towards
the walls.
Haley Rezac Oct 2013
I hope I one day fall asleep
to the thrum-thrum-thrum
of your heart
against my cheek
as your fingertips caress my side
and our toes
press together

call me cliché
but that, my love,
is all I'll ever
ask for.
Haley Rezac Oct 2013
I love you.

How much?

Well...I was going to say
to the ends of the universe and back
but I decided not to.

Why!
What's wrong with that?

...Not far enough.
To Devin.
Haley Rezac Oct 2013
Depression is not poetic
it is not beautiful
when examined under
pale moonlight

it is not something one should strive for
in order to be understood
in order to connect
with their temporarily sad peers

Depression is a continous thought
flowing from your fingertips
and vibrating in your eardrums
when you are wide awake at 3 a.m.
devising a plan to sleep forever

why do people think that
admitting to a neverending onslaught of internal battles
is glamorous?
do they not know that happiness
sits comfortably on the tips of their noses,
an arm’s reach away?

I dream of a world
in which teenage girls
eat three times a day
without using their fingers
as a garbage disposal
just so they can match
society’s standards of
‘pretty’.

I dream of a world
in which teenage boys
do not overload themselves
on some mechanical
technological machine
just so they can match
society’s standards of
‘strong’.

I crave a world
in which I am not artificial
in which I do not need pills
to smile.

I crave a world
in which we can all laugh;
a world in which
we actually live and breathe
rather than
exist and ruin;
a world in which
‘Depressed’
‘Pretty’
‘Hot’
‘Manly’
are simply adjectives
and not definitons
of who we are.
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