Some nights I am not running I am still. Not happy, not sad, just not hungry for more because for a moment I forget what I don’t have.
I make a home out of this silence, lay down my fears like coats on the cold floor of my heart, and sit.
But then comes the boy.
The one with dust in his lungs from screaming into pillows, with hands too small to hold the reasons no one stayed.
Even when I dress him in the things I’ve earned he still stares at me with those ******* eyes, asking why it still hurts to be.
He doesn’t care that I built something from fire. He only asks why the fire’s still inside me.
And some nights I want to take a blade of thought and cut that voice out, carve away the part of me that says I’ll never be whole, never be worth the air I breathe.
But I get up.
I build again. I shake hands, send emails, lift weights, try to sculpt a man from the ache of not being valued.
Every win is a window I climb through just to see if he’s still there. And he always is barefoot, bleeding on the glass I left behind.
What no one tells you about childhood trauma is that it isn’t a story you grow out of it’s a script your bones memorize, reciting it silently even as you sing of peace.
Even with everything, the boy survives. And maybe just maybe he’s waiting not to be fixed, but to be heard.