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Rachel Herrmann Jan 2015
I used to think my heart beat just for you but now I'm starting to realize it's just pumping my blood keeping me stuck in this disease we all call living.
Rachel Herrmann Jan 2015
To feel the rise and fall of your chest
And to hear your soft heart beat
Leaves me impressed.
Rachel Herrmann Jan 2015
Ribs,
Protruding proof
Of a girl in pain
With a need for control.
Ribs,
A mark of willpower
Or is it weakness
A false sense of control
A puppet governed
By insecurity.
The monster inside,
Taunting.
Empty stomach
Is it applauding your strength,
Or growling at your cruelty?
Rachel Herrmann Jan 2015
A cigarette dangles from your lips,
And from it smoke arises
In puffs and celestial swirls.
Eddies of toxic exhaust,
In the process of a great ascension
To the sky,
So blue.
Black lungs to match a blackened soul.
What truth there is in your eyes,
As if the purity of the iridescence
Was a sign of unadulterated authenticity.
How infallible your arms
To be enclosed in them
Is to be enveloped in radiant heat.
Never shall I falter
In the presence of you.
Your gaze holds me steady
Even in the instability of this world.
Precariously you lie on the bridge connecting life and death.
You don't waver when the wind whispers deceptions,
A ploy it created to drive you off the edge.
The wind's jealousy creates deceit you will not fall for.
I am not so strong.
I come to join you,
But where you are planted firmly,
I am loosely placed.
And when the wind whispers my name
I turn to it,
Falling away from you
And into the vast expanse
Of broken elsewheres.
Rachel Herrmann Jan 2015
The longer you've been gone the more I forget what your face looked like, I thought it'd be etched into my vision forever.
I've almost forgotten what your voice sounded like,
how your lips curved around my name.
I almost feel guilty for forgetting,
as if it means that I never cared enough.
Almost like the guilt I have for having felt too self important to reply to your messages,
as if you being so far away was an excuse for emotional distance,
almost like the distance of our physical bodies paralleled with the distance I wanted to keep from you with vulnerability.
Maybe that's why when you first talked about suicide,
I didn't try hard enough to keep you safe.
I didn't want to be so close to someone that I be the thing that keeps them alive.
But I still tried,
tried to make sure you were okay.
That was when you promised me that you would never hurt yourself, that you were just stressed.
Who knew that five months later you'd be dead by your own hand.
I wonder what your thoughts were as you slid the blade along your wrist. He says it was an accident.
That you were just trying to relieve a little bit of pain.
But I imagine you sitting there,
with this thing that's almost as sharp as the pain you felt,
and I know,
I know that the extra pressure you used was intentional.
I know you.
I know the pain you felt.
I was there.
And sometimes I feel guilt for being the survivor.
As if one of us had to die.
I think sometimes about what it would be like to take your place,
to be nothing.
But as I sit here and ponder what could have been,
I know that I'm glad to be the one alive.
Because if the roles were switched,
you might have to feel the pain I feel now,
and this gut wrenching sting that's arising in my stomach.
Maybe if the roles were switched,
neither of us would have made it.
Because maybe you wouldn't have gotten the help that I have now.
And while it hurts that you're gone,
I know that you'd be proud of me now.
Because now I am alive,
like I never was before.
I'm just sorry it took your death to bring me into hell
so I could climb back up to life again.
In loving memory of Aleigha Gutierrez.
Rachel Herrmann Jan 2015
I met a girl once, not older than nine or ten. She was wearing a little white dress with scarlet begonias running across the hem of her waist. She told me of her plan, the one she wrote up on the corner of Jefferson Street on a used paper napkin. It was brown, she said, as if having it been brown was of some sort of significance. On it she wrote her fate. Her plan was to find a raccoon, one much too wild to be sane. Once she found this rabid raccoon she would provoke it, make it agitated. Agitated enough to bite her. She wanted to acquire the rabies virus. She wanted it to course through her nervous system, advancing its way to her brain, slowly making her mad. Crazy mad, not angry mad, I asked her to clarify this for me. When I interrogated her more, eager to know why she wanted this she simply said, “I want to be like mommy.” Before I could stop her, she walked away and jumped on a bus, weak and wobbly.

                                                        *
      A week later, I was watching the news when I heard of the death of a girl. The girl with scarlet begonias and a wish for insanity.
Rachel Herrmann Jan 2015
Dark days,
Late nights.
Staying up 'til three,
If only I could remain asleep
To avoid the lonely hours
That consciousness brings.
You gave me an idea for the future,
If you could even call it that.
I'd be a lady of the night,
As they have coined the term
Because they are too conservative to say *****,
As if the word would burn their self-righteous lips.
So I give my body to men
Night after restless night
Because you taught me that that was all I was good for.
A broken toy you used
Simply because it was available
Leaving me feeling worthless and destroyed.
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