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i miss the simple life in the way we all do. bringing water from the well – the blue one – at every street corner. collecting firewood so the winter stock would last, toasting bread on the fireplace brushed with a garlic clove, and salt. i remember the signs in windows, people selling eggs. creeping into the barn, scared of spiders and chickens, but still collecting them, while still warm, and fresh. we’d scavenge at the edge of town – never allowed, but we went anyway. swimming in ***** waters, slick with chemicals and gasoline, we didn’t have allergies to the world. just rolled around in grass and dirt, not caring what lay beneath, or might bite. once, we let the cat taste the tomato soup from my mother’s bowl, while she was on the loo. we snickered, choking on laughter, watching her savour every spoonful. we were partners in crime, my brother and i. i even miss the smell of the old theatre. its worn-out curtains heavy with nerves as we danced, competed, recited poems, pretended to be one of the great figures of the past, and lay on the cold, hardwood floor, covered in dust. i could list these memories for ages. what it felt like to be a child. weightless. magical. curious, and bright. i wanted to grow up too quickly. when i should have held on tight.
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Aug 12, 2025
Aug 12, 2025 at 1:27 PM UTC
grow up with me.
i miss the simple life in the way we all do. bringing water from the well – the blue one – at every street corner. collecting firewood so the winter stock would last, toasting bread on the fireplace brushed with a garlic clove, and salt. i remember the signs in windows, people selling eggs. creeping into the barn, scared of spiders and chickens, but still collecting them, while still warm, and fresh. we’d scavenge at the edge of town – never allowed, but we went anyway. swimming in ***** waters, slick with chemicals and gasoline, we didn’t have allergies to the world. just rolled around in grass and dirt, not caring what lay beneath, or might bite. once, we let the cat taste the tomato soup from my mother’s bowl, while she was on the loo. we snickered, choking on laughter, watching her savour every spoonful. we were partners in crime, my brother and i. i even miss the smell of the old theatre. its worn-out curtains heavy with nerves as we danced, competed, recited poems, pretended to be one of the great figures of the past, and lay on the cold, hardwood floor, covered in dust. i could list these memories for ages. what it felt like to be a child. weightless. magical. curious, and bright. i wanted to grow up too quickly. when i should have held on tight.
this one is about the unshakable warmth of childhood memories, and the ache of realising you rushed to leave them behind.
kortuvalentinepoetry
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Aug 12, 2025
Aug 12, 2025 at 1:27 PM UTC
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