I read your poem today— not just the words, but the ache between them. You cut your hair, and somehow the strands fell like silent echoes of everything you’ve lost. But I saw more than sorrow in your lines.
I saw a girl standing in front of a mirror, eyes red but brave, wearing grief like a crown that did not crush her.
You cry, because you feel deeply— and that, to me, is the most courageous kind of strength. To let the world change you, and still choose to meet it with softness.
You speak of those you’ve lost, but do you know what you’ve found? A voice that bleeds honesty, a spirit that bends but never breaks, a beauty that isn't in the hair you lost, but in the fire you quietly carry.
I may only know you through verses and distant glances, but I want you to know— someone is reading, someone sees the light tucked gently beneath your grief, and believes in the woman you’re still becoming.
And when you looked in that mirror— I wish you could have seen what I saw from afar: not just a girl who cut her hair, but one who’s slowly growing wings.