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there are still poems of you rotting softly in my drawers — paper-boned heartaches that smell of cigarette smoke and petrichor and old perfume that have all learned to outgrow my cathedral memories of you. darling, I wrote you into everything — all feral. mundane. visceral; into the spine of every lonely dusk, into stray storms washing over our love, into trembling midnights I would spend thinking about you. I wrote way too many poems about you. after all, what is first love if not a catastrophe that leaves an aftermath for one to suffer? so I’ve turned you into poetry, darling. and every word sounds faintly of your footfalls leaving, of quivering breaths I couldn’t hold when your ****** lips first touched mine and staked their claim on my innocence. I was so afraid — thinking that the world would bruise me and throw greek fires at my trembling feet for kissing a boy at sixteen — for laying my softness bare and giving in to your papery arms. the world’s anger had drowned me, but I loved you still. I loved you with all the stolen afternoons and borrowed metaphors we kept hidden in locker rooms and midnight conversations. I loved you like a hymn tucked beneath two young lovers’ tongues. like a prayer to abandoned gods. the world gnawed at tenderness with cruel and restless teeth, but I loved you still, darling. and still, you left me. and your absence, your farewell once burned through my **** ribs. I remember how the stars hung outside my window like an unwritten apology, like words gathered at your clogged throat. so I reached for a pen, instead, and wrote the thousands of apologies we failed to send each other. I wrote way too many poems about you. darling, tell me — have you written one about me too? after you, the nights just slipped away like a montage of hushed clamors and love poems in sheer disarray. but every love poem felt like an elegy before I could even start writing. every sheet had yellowed on the edges and grieved longer than the storms I’ve weathered in the wake of your departure. all this in vain pursuit of forgetting you. all this just to quiet the echo of you. and truth be told — I’ve loved a handful of men after you, learned to weather each season of heartaches — but this harrowing storm of grief that takes its shape out of you is a patient river. it always circles back. as bruises return beneath each paper cut. as poems return to the wound that first taught their language. darling, even the wreckage has learned to speak your name. I’ve loved a handful of men after you, truly, deeply, in the ways I could. yet every season steeped in sorrow — every quiet undoing, every solitary dusk, every trembling midnight — always leads back to you. I wrote way too many poems about you. all rotting softly in my drawers. darling, I hope someday, your hands will find them, and your eyes will finally linger on every dusty word.
0
May 25
May 25, 2026 at 7:48 AM UTC
V.A.M.
there are still poems of you rotting softly in my drawers — paper-boned heartaches that smell of cigarette smoke and petrichor and old perfume that have all learned to outgrow my cathedral memories of you. darling, I wrote you into everything — all feral. mundane. visceral; into the spine of every lonely dusk, into stray storms washing over our love, into trembling midnights I would spend thinking about you. I wrote way too many poems about you. after all, what is first love if not a catastrophe that leaves an aftermath for one to suffer? so I’ve turned you into poetry, darling. and every word sounds faintly of your footfalls leaving, of quivering breaths I couldn’t hold when your ****** lips first touched mine and staked their claim on my innocence. I was so afraid — thinking that the world would bruise me and throw greek fires at my trembling feet for kissing a boy at sixteen — for laying my softness bare and giving in to your papery arms. the world’s anger had drowned me, but I loved you still. I loved you with all the stolen afternoons and borrowed metaphors we kept hidden in locker rooms and midnight conversations. I loved you like a hymn tucked beneath two young lovers’ tongues. like a prayer to abandoned gods. the world gnawed at tenderness with cruel and restless teeth, but I loved you still, darling. and still, you left me. and your absence, your farewell once burned through my **** ribs. I remember how the stars hung outside my window like an unwritten apology, like words gathered at your clogged throat. so I reached for a pen, instead, and wrote the thousands of apologies we failed to send each other. I wrote way too many poems about you. darling, tell me — have you written one about me too? after you, the nights just slipped away like a montage of hushed clamors and love poems in sheer disarray. but every love poem felt like an elegy before I could even start writing. every sheet had yellowed on the edges and grieved longer than the storms I’ve weathered in the wake of your departure. all this in vain pursuit of forgetting you. all this just to quiet the echo of you. and truth be told — I’ve loved a handful of men after you, learned to weather each season of heartaches — but this harrowing storm of grief that takes its shape out of you is a patient river. it always circles back. as bruises return beneath each paper cut. as poems return to the wound that first taught their language. darling, even the wreckage has learned to speak your name. I’ve loved a handful of men after you, truly, deeply, in the ways I could. yet every season steeped in sorrow — every quiet undoing, every solitary dusk, every trembling midnight — always leads back to you. I wrote way too many poems about you. all rotting softly in my drawers. darling, I hope someday, your hands will find them, and your eyes will finally linger on every dusty word.
REY
Written by
25/M/Philippines
May 25
May 25, 2026 at 7:48 AM UTC
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