Turn off the music, stop that constant doing. Look it in its bloodied teeth: This broke us. This was far too much. We don't know how to be a person after this. We can't even seem to comb our hair.
All we have now are all these pieces. We kneel in the shards, and feel the remnants cut, and wail about our scarred images and cancelled plans.
We don't know what to do when we're shattered, but maybe if we can just feel this breaking, without lusting for the once-****** whole, we can grow quiet enough to hear the laughter:
for the neighbor kids have already begun stringing our pieces into bracelets that say Love.
An old man is scattering our fragments in the park. People delight as the pigeons descend.
A salesman peddles our scraps door to door, and makes enough to finally pay the bill that turns the lights back on.
A tailor makes a sweater of our mistakes, while a baker turns our heartbreaks into bread for a different kind of breaking.
Come to the window, these new friends call. See what our brokenness has become. Our pieces are raining from the sky and quenching this parched earth. People are dancing in the streets.
Close your eyes and listen to the laughter and the rainfall of what our pieces teach.