i have survived storms. i have survived a father's voice like thunder; handprint lightning flowers petal over my skin like i am a garden to sinners- adam and eve call my grassroots their home and hum lullabies- i have survived anger. pros and cons of clock-ticking therapy sessions where money is thrown at my gaze, fixed on the wall, dollar-a-second drumming fingers screaming so loud that heaven shuts the blinds and hangs a "closed" sign on the door. pros and cons of stumbling home, under a murky peerless crowd of smoke, slurring words trail around and behind me like moths to a porchlight. morning headaches, angry adults damaging drywall and breaking family portraits exhausting search for answers exhausting search in a silence that lengthens the disconnect from child to mother where your mind goes red and the honest truth that stays stuck to the roof of your mouth falls out where you become an overflowing mailbox and your hands shake the absence of parents who never taught you to hold your tongue i have survived hurt. i have survived the specific type of loss that you feel in the pit of your stomach the one that lies next to you when you stare at the ceiling and your face hurts from crying tears scrub your eyelids raw and you promise, "if i ever make it through this, i will never be here again." i have survived giving up, taking it all back, throwing it all away, parallel structures of contemplation and decision i have survived lonely. angry storms of abandonment, melodies of the lonely and the hurt i reprise to the ones that add injury to insult, you are not the worst thing that has ever happened to me. i echo choruses to the people that force me to grow up at sixteen i have destruction embedded into my neurotransmitters i have shooting post-traumatic pain in my memories i have survived a hell that your hands are not stained enough to touch. i assure you, my love, i will survive you as well