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toxicity isn’t the only word that describes the roof we live under. Oh, perhaps a ghost house? But aren’t the walls still echoing with the loud shouts we endured as children? No— apparently, that was just “normal.” Or was it abuse disguised as discipline, as love, as something we were never allowed to question? A “home” we dream of— but oh, home, why do I still search for you everywhere I go? I was born homeless. Homeless? Yes—homeless, but with a roof over my head. Walls still echoing the same loud noises, shattering into pieces I was told to pick up quietly. Father— haven’t you claimed yourself as mine? Then why does your love feel like something I have to earn, again and again? Mother— can’t you see the silence eating me alive? The invisible wounds, the quiet breaking? Won’t you save your daughter? Why do you fight? Don’t you call it love? Haven’t you said that you loved me? Then mother— why do I feel homeless? Father— why do I search for your love in every person I meet, in every voice that sounds kinder than yours? Isn’t home supposed to be our solace? Then why do its walls echo like thunder, loud enough to drown a child’s heart? Where is the happiness I see living in other families’ lives? “Elder daughter”— why is she the one who learns to cry in silence, while carrying the weight of a world no one sees on her back? Oh, home— what a tragedy you’ve become for some of us, that we must bleed onto paper just to survive you. Oh, home, when will I ever be able to reach you? Or will you ever reach me? Or am I destined to keep searching for a place that was supposed to be mine from the very beginning? —faye
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Apr 25
Apr 25, 2026 at 6:37 AM UTC
A House That Was Never Home
toxicity isn’t the only word that describes the roof we live under. Oh, perhaps a ghost house? But aren’t the walls still echoing with the loud shouts we endured as children? No— apparently, that was just “normal.” Or was it abuse disguised as discipline, as love, as something we were never allowed to question? A “home” we dream of— but oh, home, why do I still search for you everywhere I go? I was born homeless. Homeless? Yes—homeless, but with a roof over my head. Walls still echoing the same loud noises, shattering into pieces I was told to pick up quietly. Father— haven’t you claimed yourself as mine? Then why does your love feel like something I have to earn, again and again? Mother— can’t you see the silence eating me alive? The invisible wounds, the quiet breaking? Won’t you save your daughter? Why do you fight? Don’t you call it love? Haven’t you said that you loved me? Then mother— why do I feel homeless? Father— why do I search for your love in every person I meet, in every voice that sounds kinder than yours? Isn’t home supposed to be our solace? Then why do its walls echo like thunder, loud enough to drown a child’s heart? Where is the happiness I see living in other families’ lives? “Elder daughter”— why is she the one who learns to cry in silence, while carrying the weight of a world no one sees on her back? Oh, home— what a tragedy you’ve become for some of us, that we must bleed onto paper just to survive you. Oh, home, when will I ever be able to reach you? Or will you ever reach me? Or am I destined to keep searching for a place that was supposed to be mine from the very beginning? —faye
Fayewrts
Written by
19/F/India
Apr 25
Apr 25, 2026 at 6:37 AM UTC
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