Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
The first time I couldn't get out of bed, I shook so hard I feared my bones would shatter. My mum never taught me how to deal with this excruciating emptiness inside me, she never told me one day I could wake up and feel like nothing in my life would ever matter. She never told me there could be days and nights that pass by in the blink of an eye days and nights when I lie on my bed and force myself to breathe -- because even breathing feels like a tedious chore. She never told me I might wake up some day and feel so tired, so tired that no amount of sleep would ever make me un-tired again. She never told me I might sit on the bathroom floor some night and feel the water run over me feel it seep into my bones and I might just sit there, for hours on end until the boiling hot water that could leave my skin blistered went ice cold and made me shiver -- She never told me that I might sink nails and blades deep into my flesh like voracious beasts because it might take the pain away somehow. She never told me that I might stay awake trying to lull myself every single night while voices in my head churned and churned and churned that I was useless, that no one would ever love me, that I was incapable of being loved. She never told me that my bones would feel so feeble, fragile, that I would always, always feel so cold. She never told me that I would sprawl myself on the bed, eyes wide open, stinging and I would wonder why nothing at all mattered to me. She never told me that I would end up fearing the blinding daylight sneaking in through the curtains because it means another day of apathetic existence. She never told me that I would feel like a graveyard, and she never told me that a day might come when I look in the mirror and see a ghost. She never warned me that the world might turn gray, she never ever ever warned me that panic would sometimes sweep me off my feet like a tidal wave and I would lie on the floor/in a hole in the ground/on a bed of nails and struggle for breath and force my heart to keep beating -- for what I do not know, because she never told me that a day might come when nothing in the world would have a meaning. She never told me I would walk past snowdrifts and wish for peace and crave to lie in one and let the snow cover me until my lips were blue and my skin was blue and my eyes were cold and I was finally as blue on the outside as on the inside. That I would want to die simply because there was nothing to keep me living. That I would stuff myself with pills so I could fall asleep at last. She never told me. She never warned me. So when I went to her with my wrists ripped open and ragged my hands warm and sanguine with my own blood, she told me We can get through this like family. I don't know what family is, mom. I only know what it's like to shake like a leaf from the chill, down to your very bones, when outside it's summer. I only know what it's like to paint a porcelain smile on my porcelain face and feign interest because just like porcelain I will shatter. I only know what it's like to forcefully drag myself in the shower, to forcefully wipe my chin from the ***** to scratch slurs on my arms, or else, to be ecstatic. I don't know what family is, mom, because I've always pretended. I don't know what family is, mom, because I'm made out of plastic. I don't know what family is, mom. Dead girls don't have families.
0
Aug 16, 2015
Aug 16, 2015 at 9:51 AM UTC
My Mom Never Told Me
The first time I couldn't get out of bed, I shook so hard I feared my bones would shatter. My mum never taught me how to deal with this excruciating emptiness inside me, she never told me one day I could wake up and feel like nothing in my life would ever matter. She never told me there could be days and nights that pass by in the blink of an eye days and nights when I lie on my bed and force myself to breathe -- because even breathing feels like a tedious chore. She never told me I might wake up some day and feel so tired, so tired that no amount of sleep would ever make me un-tired again. She never told me I might sit on the bathroom floor some night and feel the water run over me feel it seep into my bones and I might just sit there, for hours on end until the boiling hot water that could leave my skin blistered went ice cold and made me shiver -- She never told me that I might sink nails and blades deep into my flesh like voracious beasts because it might take the pain away somehow. She never told me that I might stay awake trying to lull myself every single night while voices in my head churned and churned and churned that I was useless, that no one would ever love me, that I was incapable of being loved. She never told me that my bones would feel so feeble, fragile, that I would always, always feel so cold. She never told me that I would sprawl myself on the bed, eyes wide open, stinging and I would wonder why nothing at all mattered to me. She never told me that I would end up fearing the blinding daylight sneaking in through the curtains because it means another day of apathetic existence. She never told me that I would feel like a graveyard, and she never told me that a day might come when I look in the mirror and see a ghost. She never warned me that the world might turn gray, she never ever ever warned me that panic would sometimes sweep me off my feet like a tidal wave and I would lie on the floor/in a hole in the ground/on a bed of nails and struggle for breath and force my heart to keep beating -- for what I do not know, because she never told me that a day might come when nothing in the world would have a meaning. She never told me I would walk past snowdrifts and wish for peace and crave to lie in one and let the snow cover me until my lips were blue and my skin was blue and my eyes were cold and I was finally as blue on the outside as on the inside. That I would want to die simply because there was nothing to keep me living. That I would stuff myself with pills so I could fall asleep at last. She never told me. She never warned me. So when I went to her with my wrists ripped open and ragged my hands warm and sanguine with my own blood, she told me We can get through this like family. I don't know what family is, mom. I only know what it's like to shake like a leaf from the chill, down to your very bones, when outside it's summer. I only know what it's like to paint a porcelain smile on my porcelain face and feign interest because just like porcelain I will shatter. I only know what it's like to forcefully drag myself in the shower, to forcefully wipe my chin from the ***** to scratch slurs on my arms, or else, to be ecstatic. I don't know what family is, mom, because I've always pretended. I don't know what family is, mom, because I'm made out of plastic. I don't know what family is, mom. Dead girls don't have families.
raw-with-love
Written by
Aug 16, 2015
Aug 16, 2015 at 9:51 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem