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Asher Aug 5
i wake and feel it haunt my chest
a shadow i can’t quite forget.
it whispers soft, but sharp and deep,
a fear that never falls asleep.

i know one day it will arrive,
by my own hand, or life’s design.
not if, but when. that’s always clear.
it’s crept beside me many years.

i’ve never known a life that shone,
just gray and hollow, all along.
even as a child, i knew
this path would never bloom or bloom true.

so when the year draws to its close,
i’ll let go all i’ve ever known.
i’ll say goodbye to morning air,
to birds that sing like life is fair.

goodbye to mom, whose love was warm,
who cradled me through every storm.
goodbye to dad, whose fleeting stay
taught me how fast love walks away.

i’ll whisper soft my last goodbye
no rage, no cries, no need to lie.
and in that hush, i’ll drift, unseen.
a breath, a blur. a fading dream.
i hate being a burden.

my friend brings
food to my home.
he worries about me,
waits for me to swallow
like proof i’m still here,
even though i'm so lost,
so alone.

i can feel myself
splitting at the seams,
turning into
something i’m not.
something i fear.

i hate being a burden.

but i don’t know
how to be anything else.
this one is about the quiet collapse that comes when work swallows you whole.
August 5, 2025
Bury my phone under the maple tree.
Do not unlock it.
Let the passwords rot my teeth.
Let the wind lift the dirt in small spirals above it
so anyone passing by feels the urge to walk faster.

Keep the bracelets.
Keep the letters in the wrong order.
Let my poems splinter across languages
until no one can tell what happened first.

They will plant my voice in the garden
and water it with salt,
never admitting they were the ones
who taught me to bite.
They will leave flowers at the door
and pretend they never nailed it shut.

They will drop my name in the brown-thick lake
and watch the fish stop swimming,
like an old car battery, or a dead dog,
and it will feel like both,
depending on the sun.

They will drag my words ashore, gut them for parts.
They will build a church from my mouth,
hang my jawbone above the altar,
and pray it never speaks again.
I will kneel with them,
smiling with my empty mouth.

They will say the work was too sharp,
the girl inside it dangerous,
and never admit they handed her the knife.
They will polish the handle,
wrap it in velvet,
and wonder why she carried it everywhere,
as if it wasn’t still dripping.
Alexis K Aug 5
To love an animal
Is to grieve them.
For their entire lives,
They know only you.
Their life is a big as their home.
And you are their home.

To love an animal.
Is to hold them,
into their last Goodnight.
And grieve the light
You watched leave their eyes.

To lose an animal
Is to realize how profound life is.
It is heartbreaking just a it is bittersweet.

For I know,
Ollie always had something to eat,
And someone to snuggle with.
He always had love in a safe space.
And now he's not in pain,
Free from life's restraints.
Intwa Aug 4
We used to float,
Raising our glasses.
The great unknown before us,
Surely great.

Life in its many colours
Filled my senses, and friends were treasures.
Time an illusion, and crying… just to cry.

With your loss,
My shadow grew.
Every shade of paint against the sunlit skies
Greyed, faded—
Dead trees forming a rigid silhouette.

For one to love life so,
Lighter than the morning breeze,
Understanding beyond understanding—

On your knees you pulled the moon near,
You kissed the sun
And found love wherever you went.

As I drag my shackles day after day,
As the moon moves nearer to me,
I cannot see it.
I do not feel the warmth of the sun.
Nor do I embrace love wherever I go.

For it was ordained then
That I would survive you—
Though the weight had not been foretold.

The shadow puts its hand on my shoulder,
A solemn kindness in its grip.
It is time to go,
To endure… again.
It hurts in places
I never knew existed.
Like how my fingertips ache,
and a mournful scream
lives in the back of my throat.

There is a black hole
where my heart once lived,
dense and ravenous,
swallowing light,
devouring warmth,
collapsing joy
into nothing.

Some days,
the void feels large enough
to consume me,
completely.

But still,
I wake.
Still,
I breathe.

And somehow,
without noticing,
I’ve grown strong enough
to carry it.
Not because the pain has lessened,
but because it’s changing me.

Sometimes,
the pain wants to cry out
I love you
loud enough
to reach you.

But those words
would fall into a silence
you no longer fill.

I wish I’d said them
a thousand more times
when they still had
somewhere to land.

I wish I could say
I love you
instead of
I loved you.

But if this grief
is just love
with no place to go,
I will ache
in all these new and strange places.
Willingly.

And I will wake up every day,
and breathe, one breath at a time.

Because this pain
is simply love,
wearing a different skin.
Follow me on instagram @incurable_poet
Grief doesn’t ask for permission, it just arrives and remakes you. If you’ve ever loved someone so deeply that their absence feels like gravity itself, this is for you.
We don’t “move on.” We move forward, with the weight, with the ache, with love that still needs somewhere to go.
Keegan Aug 2
All night, the brushes bristle
with unsteady prayers,
oil and terror in every sweep,
each canvas a battlefield
between memory and madness,
between longing and loss.

He paints in fever,
his trembling hand chasing ghosts
across gessoed plains,
trying to mend the world
with color and chaos
a smudge for each regret,
a highlight for every hope
he’s drowned in turpentine.

The house groans and blurs
behind him,
rooms melting into each other
like faces on the page,
shapes that won’t hold still,
voices splintering in the walls
they whisper, paint,
paint,
paint,
until there is nothing left
but cracked varnish
and the echo of “almost.”

He paints what he lost:
her laughter in morning light,
the gentle reach of hands
he can’t recall in detail
only the ache,
the hollow,
the unfinished lines
he keeps returning to.

Perfection dangles, just out of reach,
each stroke carving him hollow
as his world frays at the edges
canvas peeling back
to reveal the wound
he cannot heal.

He whispers to the silence,
to the shadows gathering thick as oil
Finish it for me.
His plea stains the air,
weightless as dust,
hoping someone
even in the next room,
or the next life
will take the brush
and find the shape
of what he could not complete.

In the end,
he paints and paints,
chasing the ghost of a masterpiece,
painting himself out of the world,
leaving behind
one trembling signature,
unfinished
waiting
for a gentler hand
to finish it for him.
The arch of the parish doors is round, and the glow they emit
is a befitting symbol of a threshold, of what it is to cross from life back to death. The funeral attendees gather and walk behind the hearse under the gloomy rain of sentiment and cold droplets of an august downpour. I hear my mother exhale, her face reddened by a cloak of head-tilting sorrow. someone who cannot be replaced has died that is what I make of the bird's chirping on this day ( and of mother's downward gaze.)
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