Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
I think she lost a part of herself, picking up the pieces. And that's okay; the universe works because something is given for something to be gained. Her parents were red-blooded Americans; they drank confirmation- bias and the minimization of minorities. They would make her problems as small as the countries, they couldn't find on a map, but could find in their hearts to demonize. Oh yes, the demons: what used to afflict her and corrupt her pure heart. To them, she wasn't a teenager -- a child -- stressed from carrying a family, featuring a mother with a brain tumor; guest starring 'I-stunt-your-growth-with-Jesus' as the understudy for mental health awareness. No, she wasn't a child; she was a burden because she cut herself, because her legs grew too thin; as thin as the crucifixes around the proud, turning necks, holding dismissive heads of 'Why-would- you-want-to-be-dead' Christians and 'I-don't-understand-what-isn't- in-the-Bible' fat, white relatives. To make things short as her life could have been: she dipped in and out of drugs, featuring ****** and pills that would dip in and out of her body, like a fool's gold life jacket, soaking in the waves of her pale, transitioning to adulthood, twenty year-old waters. She saved herself, and they thanked God and the boy and mostly everyone else but her. And the little brother sat, sinking in a seat softer than his deep-seated hateful beliefs. But, the truth is that she saved not only herself, but also the handsome, white, tall, smart, talented image of 'Holy-shit-what-a-tall- drink-of-privilege.' A tall drink who cared for her more than the country cared about being right; who loved her more than the parents of the degenerates living in some unknown collection of poems about the disenfranchised and American angst. She was a protest, very wondrous; a halting of the longest dark, a breath of fog floating towards a lonely, very deep pond. And she was only beginning. And it was all very exciting.
0
May 11, 2017
May 11, 2017 at 9:56 PM UTC
25. American Girl; Degenerates
I think she lost a part of herself, picking up the pieces. And that's okay; the universe works because something is given for something to be gained. Her parents were red-blooded Americans; they drank confirmation- bias and the minimization of minorities. They would make her problems as small as the countries, they couldn't find on a map, but could find in their hearts to demonize. Oh yes, the demons: what used to afflict her and corrupt her pure heart. To them, she wasn't a teenager -- a child -- stressed from carrying a family, featuring a mother with a brain tumor; guest starring 'I-stunt-your-growth-with-Jesus' as the understudy for mental health awareness. No, she wasn't a child; she was a burden because she cut herself, because her legs grew too thin; as thin as the crucifixes around the proud, turning necks, holding dismissive heads of 'Why-would- you-want-to-be-dead' Christians and 'I-don't-understand-what-isn't- in-the-Bible' fat, white relatives. To make things short as her life could have been: she dipped in and out of drugs, featuring ****** and pills that would dip in and out of her body, like a fool's gold life jacket, soaking in the waves of her pale, transitioning to adulthood, twenty year-old waters. She saved herself, and they thanked God and the boy and mostly everyone else but her. And the little brother sat, sinking in a seat softer than his deep-seated hateful beliefs. But, the truth is that she saved not only herself, but also the handsome, white, tall, smart, talented image of 'Holy-shit-what-a-tall- drink-of-privilege.' A tall drink who cared for her more than the country cared about being right; who loved her more than the parents of the degenerates living in some unknown collection of poems about the disenfranchised and American angst. She was a protest, very wondrous; a halting of the longest dark, a breath of fog floating towards a lonely, very deep pond. And she was only beginning. And it was all very exciting.
joshua-haines
Written by
26/M/American
May 11, 2017
May 11, 2017 at 9:56 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem