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Tiffany Jun 11
I will not bring something
new into this world.

I have lost every thing ever given to me,
I will break anything I make;
I will make nothing.

I let her go,

I left her.

Turn your palms to the sky and ask for rain;
Turn your palms to each other and ask for help;

Turn your palms to me

Turn your palm to me

A cheek is meant to be red (oh rouge oh blush oh pain)
Turn my palms to the ground and ask for forgiveness
I’m sorry I thought-
I’m sorry I’ll try-

I’m sorry, tell me why

Turn my palms to each other
I hold the world;
Turn my palms to me
I swear I am sincere.

I have let everything break around me

I cannot fix anything, I make anew a lie, the taste in my mouth is not stone, it is grinding pebbles
paper becomes mulch wet chew salt ink

I don’t deserve this

I am angry
I don’t deserve this

Turn your palms to the earth and whisper your wish
Close my hand around my sword

Close your hand in the dirt

Your neck shall

Your bones shall

My blade shall


Everything I have ever touched has been broken;

Thank you for letting me embrace you

I will not bring something new into this world.  It was a happy dream.  Don’t let me go

Break yourself with me
I'm often inspired by the media I read to write poetry, instead of my own experiences — if it's recognisable to anyone, this was written in the mindset of Laois from the series Delicious in Dungeon
0 · Jun 12
Shasta Daisy
Tiffany Jun 12
Your stem is crooked — your head will fall
without help.  Your neighbour crosses your path
but lends no support.

You must be the only broken thing.

Why?

What hurt you? Did anything hurt you at all? If I could look in the past
Read you like a story
Satisfy the curiosity
— Did you snap
under the weight of a visitor? Or
Is your crown too heavy? Was life too kind; It let you grow fat and happy.
Was life too harsh and you begged for everything on the chance you’d get something at all,
until you had enough, and suddenly found you didn’t know how to stop begging?

There’s no story to read.
I walk away
and don’t think of you

until I’m writing a poem about daisies, and I walk
the same road I’ve walked every day
before — in my mind, in the dark of
my room, with bare feet
wearing a comfortable day dress to bed
because I don’t want to do laundry — and I remember you
I remember spotting you because you were different and
Oh, what a shame: this one is broken
unlike all the others
I had no rush so I stopped and looked
But there was nothing else to see so I kept walking.

This time I do not walk away.
I stop and look
and I think of you,
The broken Shasta Daisy, taller than all the others digging through the pavement
— you will fall further than them all, and you were the only one worth knowing.
I like going on walks, and I was thinking about a daisy I passed the other day...

— The End —