Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
roaring ambulance sirens chill me to the bone they always make me wonder if you are dying behind those flashing lights you were never very stable the strings holding your soul together tended to break often like the morning you ran through 5am dusty gravel roads, until your legs collapsed out from under you a string breaks snap your dad screamed a lot that night, didn't he? his glass seemed to refill itself over and over and over again scotch and whiskey slipped into his words, like always alcohol strengthened his grip, didn't it? or maybe the afternoon, at 2:35pm on a Sunday, when you filled notebook after notebook with reasons why you weren't worth everyone's time snap the pills they gave you never really worked, did they? your mother cried in her bath that night she clenched her hands into fists, and pulled her head below the water she almost forgot to come back up or possibly the evening, behind white and sterile walls, that your little brother, had to say goodnight to you in a hospital bed, asking if you were sick snap his big brother couldn't handle his demons, could he? he was only nine then, but your mom didn't tell him that she found his hero bleeding out, in their brown two-story house your father blamed you, didn't he? it was your fault for being so weak that's what he said in angry whispers, the minute your mother left your bedside could it have been the night, seven years ago this month, when your cousin couldn't take the voices in her head the house was quiet that day until a gunshot echoed down the stairs and the atmosphere turned to copper snap you didn't fully understand, did you? the police officers crowded in your aunt's living room questions and tears and badges, a monotonous start to your development angels can never handle being on Earth for very long, can they? I think it was the twilight, when the city hall clock said 3:06am, as you sped past it on your way to the bridge in tears, hearing your father's voice in your eardrums "what kind of man shows so much weakness?" "what are you good for?" "what a shame you haven't succeeded yet." his tyrades between liquor bottles always lingered "you're never good enough" "you're a waste" "you're nothing" snap you stood on the edge of that bridge, didn't you? you were ready to do it you were tired of being sick, and sick of being tired but you promised your little brother, you would help him pick out school supplies he was going to be a sixth grader, school was only two weeks away you hesitated snap you got back into your car, didn't you? you woke up the next day and pretended everything was fine spiral notebooks were on sale your brother bought a new kind of pencil case, with as many jagged edges as your unstable soul it's been a year since then and every time I hear the whining, of ambulances rushing through town, I get scared that your last string finally snapped
0
Jan 23, 2016
Jan 23, 2016 at 8:29 PM UTC
strings
roaring ambulance sirens chill me to the bone they always make me wonder if you are dying behind those flashing lights you were never very stable the strings holding your soul together tended to break often like the morning you ran through 5am dusty gravel roads, until your legs collapsed out from under you a string breaks snap your dad screamed a lot that night, didn't he? his glass seemed to refill itself over and over and over again scotch and whiskey slipped into his words, like always alcohol strengthened his grip, didn't it? or maybe the afternoon, at 2:35pm on a Sunday, when you filled notebook after notebook with reasons why you weren't worth everyone's time snap the pills they gave you never really worked, did they? your mother cried in her bath that night she clenched her hands into fists, and pulled her head below the water she almost forgot to come back up or possibly the evening, behind white and sterile walls, that your little brother, had to say goodnight to you in a hospital bed, asking if you were sick snap his big brother couldn't handle his demons, could he? he was only nine then, but your mom didn't tell him that she found his hero bleeding out, in their brown two-story house your father blamed you, didn't he? it was your fault for being so weak that's what he said in angry whispers, the minute your mother left your bedside could it have been the night, seven years ago this month, when your cousin couldn't take the voices in her head the house was quiet that day until a gunshot echoed down the stairs and the atmosphere turned to copper snap you didn't fully understand, did you? the police officers crowded in your aunt's living room questions and tears and badges, a monotonous start to your development angels can never handle being on Earth for very long, can they? I think it was the twilight, when the city hall clock said 3:06am, as you sped past it on your way to the bridge in tears, hearing your father's voice in your eardrums "what kind of man shows so much weakness?" "what are you good for?" "what a shame you haven't succeeded yet." his tyrades between liquor bottles always lingered "you're never good enough" "you're a waste" "you're nothing" snap you stood on the edge of that bridge, didn't you? you were ready to do it you were tired of being sick, and sick of being tired but you promised your little brother, you would help him pick out school supplies he was going to be a sixth grader, school was only two weeks away you hesitated snap you got back into your car, didn't you? you woke up the next day and pretended everything was fine spiral notebooks were on sale your brother bought a new kind of pencil case, with as many jagged edges as your unstable soul it's been a year since then and every time I hear the whining, of ambulances rushing through town, I get scared that your last string finally snapped
driftingsecrets
Written by
Jan 23, 2016
Jan 23, 2016 at 8:29 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem