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Kaiden A Ward Jun 2019
We wrap headphone cords
around our necks like nooses,
drowning our senses in senseless noise,
marching mechanically through the streets,
pressed forwards by the weight of the masses
at our backs, unaware of our own heartbeat as
corrupt corporations and our government masquerading
as a democracy
steer our feet down endless paths of addiction,
feeding off of our misery, stealing the life
from our lungs from the
very moment we are born.

And we never saw it coming.
  Jun 2019 Kaiden A Ward
Naveen Tiwari
A writer writes to hide his pain.
And a reader reads to find someone who feels the same.
Kaiden A Ward Jun 2019
You died,
here, in my arms,
and I could do nothing
but watch as you faded away.
Come back.
Kaiden A Ward Jun 2019
Hidden
in the echoes
of your footsteps, I walk,
obscured by your shifting shadow,
waiting.
Do you see me?
Kaiden A Ward Jun 2019
No matter how strong your desire
to erase your ancestry,
you cannot rip apart your DNA and
remove the genetic claim of kin
from your flesh
for there would be nothing left.
Kaiden A Ward May 2019
Creased and tucked behind the ID in
my wallet, is a photograph
of my mother,
sitting in a simple square rocking chair,
gazing lovinlgy down at
the newborn cradled reverently
to her chest, a smile softens her face
into one I do not recognize,
transformed by the miracle in her arms
I am rarely allowed to hold,
her first grandchild, only hours old.

She turns to gaze through the lens,
eyes burning through time, finding mine
and her expression falls flat,
aging into the woman I would face
a year from then.
Her lips curling back, exposing yellowed teeth,
face twisting in disgust to revive in vivid color
the image imprinted on my memory
of my mother's rejection
each time I dare look at it
reeling back in fresh pain.

But I cannot bear to discard
the only image I have
of my niece,
so I tuck it carefully away
between one-dollar bills
for another day.
An old poem I found and wanted to share.
Kaiden A Ward May 2019
Smile so wide he could swallow the world and
arms flung far out at his sides
he flies. Belly-down on a skateboard
the same size as him.
His whooping cries lifted to the sky
as his mother patiently nudges him along
a few feet at a time.
Just a random interaction I observed out in the park during my stay in Hawai'i.
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