Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
I was thirteen when cancer decided it knew my family better than I did. One day you were braiding my hair, the next day the house smelled like hospitals and everyone whispered like that would save you. They told me to be “strong.” **** that. I didn’t want strength— I wanted my mom back, wanted your voice yelling my name from the kitchen because I forgot my **** backpack again. I’m seventeen now, four years older and somehow still that kid standing in a hallway that feels too long, watching adults cry like they’ve lost the map to their own lives. Cancer took you slow and ugly. No movie moments. No peaceful fade-out. Just pain, machines, and me learning new words I never wanted to know. People say, “She’d be so proud of you.” And maybe that’s true, but it still ****** me off that you’re not here to say it yourself. I hit milestones without you— first breakup, first real ****** learning how to drive with no one in the passenger seat telling me to slow down. Every win feels crooked without you clapping. Some nights I’m okay. Other nights I’m furious at the universe, at God, at cancer, at every stupid pink ribbon that doesn’t bring you back. I’m still growing up without a mom, still learning how to carry grief like it’s part of my spine now. And yeah, I laugh, I live, I keep going— but there’s a part of me that will always be that thirteen-year-old kid thinking, *this is so ******* unfair.*
0
Jan 9
Jan 9, 2026 at 3:14 PM UTC
Four Years Older Than the Day Cancer Took You
I was thirteen when cancer decided it knew my family better than I did. One day you were braiding my hair, the next day the house smelled like hospitals and everyone whispered like that would save you. They told me to be “strong.” **** that. I didn’t want strength— I wanted my mom back, wanted your voice yelling my name from the kitchen because I forgot my **** backpack again. I’m seventeen now, four years older and somehow still that kid standing in a hallway that feels too long, watching adults cry like they’ve lost the map to their own lives. Cancer took you slow and ugly. No movie moments. No peaceful fade-out. Just pain, machines, and me learning new words I never wanted to know. People say, “She’d be so proud of you.” And maybe that’s true, but it still ****** me off that you’re not here to say it yourself. I hit milestones without you— first breakup, first real ****** learning how to drive with no one in the passenger seat telling me to slow down. Every win feels crooked without you clapping. Some nights I’m okay. Other nights I’m furious at the universe, at God, at cancer, at every stupid pink ribbon that doesn’t bring you back. I’m still growing up without a mom, still learning how to carry grief like it’s part of my spine now. And yeah, I laugh, I live, I keep going— but there’s a part of me that will always be that thirteen-year-old kid thinking, *this is so ******* unfair.*
I miss my mom so much to where it hurts.
Luvly_Dakotah
Written by
17/F/Kansas
Jan 9
Jan 9, 2026 at 3:14 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem