It got so bad he couldn’t sleep. Frenzied bedsheets, pillow a swamp of sweat. He’d swig milk from the carton, eyes a crush of crimson and wouldn’t say a thing.
Then he’d mention he could hear them still. The duh-duh-duh-duh of bullets zooming towards strangers, the thunderous stomach-rumble of an erupting grenade. I’d grip his hand and he’d cry, shake his head, trickle out names. I couldn’t help so I cried too. The therapist would ****** tissues at us.
I’d be careful with noises. If I dropped something he’d shoot up like an electric-shocked puppet. Body at home, mind at war. He smelt death in the air, the energy sapping from his body as if a pin had perforated his skin.
I had to drag him up from the bathroom floor, as if a putrid corpse wrenched from a river. Why is it me? What did I fight for? That’s what he asked me. I didn’t know, wouldn’t know, and we cradled each other as the shower spat out water for a minute, for an hour.
Written: March 2017. Explanation: A poem written in my own time for university, regarding a man suffering from post traumatic stress disorder after fighting in a war. Feedback welcome, and changes likely. A link to my Facebook writing page can be found on my HP home page. NOTE: Many of my older pieces will be removed from HP at some point in the future.