The same blood you have, is also a curse to have! I should be glad, but I'm mad as the one dealing with the pride of some forefathers dad.
I was taught not to place all of my blame on how my parents had raised me. But I can't keep blaming myself; as if they'll praise me. I often grew up wondering what actual resemblance I had of my dad.
The last born nobody knew, the other son all the relatives thought was just some random nephew. The family picture felt too big for me to be noticed in it's frame. I felt as a son; but only a son by just the family's name.
Seems I wasn't born the same.
All the first impressions of thinking my mother was just my aunty. Thinking I was adopted by relatives, because my real family didn't really want me.
"Maybe I was switched at birth," I thought to myself. We all could be walking on the same ground, doesn't mean we're all so down to Earth.
I guess I was buried in it, for constantly being the one to take up the family's dirt.
The theory of a twin, who died in the womb. I've felt so incomplete. Missing the other half to make me fit. Hoping I had died that time as a baby; when I had my first fit.
But to my twin up in Heaven I hope you're keeping that space for both of us. By the chance my sins get ahead of me, Could I get into Heaven by the chance of your luck?
To my father on Earth, I grew up wondering if I was ever the son you wanted, or the one you deserved. Maybe I secretly got on your nerves, as I felt the disappointment in those many cuss words.
To my mother in church, I'm not your little boy anymore. Neither that daughter you treat me as. My manhood to peers, seemed so poor. And yet I'm the ear that listens to all of your words, but not the mouth to tell you my many truths by the galore.
To my brothers by name, we all knew we were never the same. But as life went in one direction, I was the child who went the other way. I can remember all of those harsh words you often said. As if I'm tasting them all from too many past yesterdays.
To my sister I never had, life could of been easier if you were the child the family actually had. That's all I can say, because that's all that I have.