Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
i wrote about a boy the night we met, glasses and a polka-dot shirt i never thought would leave the stars and trees of that early morning in august. it felt like a lunar eclipse, a moment where i stood with my face up to the sky, straight on and uninhibited, but never expecting the moment to stay. moments like these come and go, and are accepted as fleeting; special dates to mark on the calendar, not penciled in on every square. i believed that he was fleeting. that my moons would always be grey. yet, i kept writing about him, a crimson moon with a recurring theme of crimson feeling—full of passion, anger, pain. i felt more inclined to write about him when my skin would crawl, rather than when my heart would flutter. maybe it was because our hearts were always beating, but never in time with one another. i was afraid that my poems would become gravestones, filling a cemetery of our almost love, hurtful reminders of what i’d never fully had until, now my heartstrings are completely entangled with his, a mess of indistinguishable shades of lavender that hum melodies of both obsession and safety. when i left him in those early august hours, my dreams of him faded the next morning. they turned to dust as soon as the sun touched the horizon, for four hundred and seventy-two days. i thought i’d lost something i’d never get back. i did. i watched our mercurial infatuation die, and from its ashes rose a love like nothing i’d ever known. and now my dreams of him stretch into the abyss of time, eager and familiar, as if there’s only ever been crimson moons hanging in the sky.
0
Jun 2, 2018
Jun 2, 2018 at 6:11 PM UTC
rest
i wrote about a boy the night we met, glasses and a polka-dot shirt i never thought would leave the stars and trees of that early morning in august. it felt like a lunar eclipse, a moment where i stood with my face up to the sky, straight on and uninhibited, but never expecting the moment to stay. moments like these come and go, and are accepted as fleeting; special dates to mark on the calendar, not penciled in on every square. i believed that he was fleeting. that my moons would always be grey. yet, i kept writing about him, a crimson moon with a recurring theme of crimson feeling—full of passion, anger, pain. i felt more inclined to write about him when my skin would crawl, rather than when my heart would flutter. maybe it was because our hearts were always beating, but never in time with one another. i was afraid that my poems would become gravestones, filling a cemetery of our almost love, hurtful reminders of what i’d never fully had until, now my heartstrings are completely entangled with his, a mess of indistinguishable shades of lavender that hum melodies of both obsession and safety. when i left him in those early august hours, my dreams of him faded the next morning. they turned to dust as soon as the sun touched the horizon, for four hundred and seventy-two days. i thought i’d lost something i’d never get back. i did. i watched our mercurial infatuation die, and from its ashes rose a love like nothing i’d ever known. and now my dreams of him stretch into the abyss of time, eager and familiar, as if there’s only ever been crimson moons hanging in the sky.
from my book, 'please don't go before i get better' read here: http://bit.ly/pdgbigb
madisen
Written by
American
Jun 2, 2018
Jun 2, 2018 at 6:11 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem