{For solo performer (mask optional). Lighting: warm, then cruel. Microphone optional. Heartbreak required.}
[Lights up. One step too close to the mic. She smiles like she’s survived something.]
POET: I said I was shattered.
[Pause—look down, then up. Like you’re remembering it too vividly.]
And the crowd snapped. I said I couldn’t sleep.
[Soften your voice here. Sell it. They love insomnia.]
And they nodded. I smiled at the right moments. Let my voice break on the word left.
[Yes. That word. Linger on it.]
Called it a poem. Called it truth.
[Invisible margin note: Remove “pathetic.” You already said “poem.” Same effect.]
POET: And it was— mostly.
[Look away. Smile like a secret.]
I didn’t mention how long I waited for him to text back.
[In script: add something about refreshing Instagram. Delete it later.]
I said he left, not I begged. I said I healed, not I still Google him sometimes just to feel something specific.
[Optional: laugh. See who laughs back.]
[Stage note: Adjust mic stand like it’s his hand on your jaw. Let them feel it.]
POET: I sharpened the metaphors. Cut the clumsy parts. Dressed the grief in short skirts and darling dresses, and made her look like a woman you’d want to cry over.
[Look devastating here. Not sad. Iconic.]
I didn’t lie. I edited.
[Beat.]
Like any good writer. Like any sad girl with an audience.