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Kalliope Jul 26
Insults thrown as easily as tableware,
And I catch every single one.
I never learned to duck, dodge, or weave-
Plates fall and shatter,
Ceramic cuts my skin.

I stopped trying to get out,
Accepting the pain,
Because I believed I let it begin.

But pain never asks permission.
It just makes itself at home.
Living with it is hard-
But no one tells you
How hard it is
Once you kick it out.

Plates no longer fly.
There are no holes in the walls.
Nothing lurks around the corners,
But still,
Your heart races in the dark.

Safety is an illusion
You can barely see.
Healing is so daunting
When you're attached to pain
You shouldn't be.
I didn’t notice the damage until I began the repairs-
patching holes, sweeping quiet shards,
still cleaning messes long after the breaking stopped.
Chandra S Jul 24
Why do I feel for them?

Is it because
they remind me
of me—
these bacteria?
They move slowly.
They hide out.
Build small.
Stay unnoticed.

They’ve been with me
longer than I’ve known.
And they don’t have an intent
to ****.
They just wanted a home.
That I might die
was never their goal.
It’s just a fallout.

But me?
I have intent to ****.
Every day I wake up
and take pills
like they were warheads.
The pill has no motive to **** either.
No ammo does.
It is always the man behind.
The pill—
It is just a chemical configuration
that doesn’t know why it dissolves.

I take note of the dynamic.
The one without intent dies.
The one with, decides.
I pop the pill.
Then it's the germ versus the pill.
Germ survives, I die.
Pill survives, I live.

Wonder where else I have seen this.

Nations— vetoed into silence?
Children— bullied into submission?
Friends— who were docile, forgotten?
Me— or someone like me—
who took a call.

It is strange to feel
unspoken companionship
with microbes that ****?
Will it feel strange
when they’re gone?

I think about that.
Like how people trying to quit
miss their cigarettes.
Not just the nicotine—
the mateyness with the stick—
Here just now. Then gone.

Will I feel that?
A weird kind of postpartum?
Not grief, exactly.
But absence.
Silence where something lived.
Once.

I think illness does this to people.
Brings delirious thoughts, that is.
Imagine befriending or mourning bacteria
or weighing up their intent
in your right minds. Eh.

Why did they choose me though?
Because, I too am quiet, like them?
It angers me to think.
Then I feel a tired, grudging respect for them,
as if finally learning self-respect.

They, the bacilli, have no malice.
They don’t even know I exist.
They don’t feel guilt.
Or regret.
They just are.

But I have to end them.
Each day.
Like heartbreak.

I wonder if they could speak,
what would they say?

Maybe nothing.

Maybe like monks in the hills,
they’d bow and whisper,
“We only came to live.”

And I would say back,
quietly,
almost ashamed,

“So did I.”
I wrote this in recognition of the sometimes inevitable necessity to eliminate one life form so that another can go on. The illness in question isn't named because the dilemma isn’t about diagnosis. It’s about intent. About the strange position of having to end something that never meant harm. Of being the only one at the table with a mind, and a choice, and the unbearable clarity of consequence.
The poem tries to sit with this discomfort: that sometimes, survival means killing without hate. That the enemy may not even know you exist. That war can be fought not with weapons, but with a glass of water and a pill. And that even in such silence, there can be a murmur. A bit like grief.
Draumgaldr Jul 23
Hunger growls, and I listen.
I will be the one that lasts.
Out of sight, no sound given.
You will be the one I catch.

Wind howls; I am missing.
Sky is watching my advance.
Muscles tighten, knees stiffen.
Nightly creatures all in trance.

Screams muffled, blurry vision.
Searing pain — you collapse,
Giving in to intuition.
Knife digging deep and fast.

Two are one in coalition.
Hunger finally satisfied.
A dance in shadow, where hunger and instinct converge—nothing more, nothing less.
Zywa Jul 23
When your life is tough,

you do need a tough language:


poetic language.
Autobiography "Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?" (2011, Jeanette Winterson; normal means: heterosexual), chapter 4, The Trouble With A Book . . .

Collection "Inwardings"
I read a book about men and anger —
and it clawed into my chest like guilt with teeth.
Not just the loud eruptions,
but the quiet fires I never noticed burning,
the way I smoldered
while pretending I wasn’t heat.

Was I the villain in our ruin?
Is that why I wake up with her face aching behind my eyes?
Why I weeped this morning
from dreaming of her warmth beside me?

Yes, I shouted.
Yes, I shut down.
Yes, I swallowed rage until it poisoned everything we tried to build.
But didn't she light matches too?

She pulled away —
a distance I could feel, even when her skin was close.
Was it all a plan?
was she really “just waiting" to be rid of me?

I wanted forever.
Now all I have is this loop —
the smoking remnants of what was,
what might have been,
what may never come again.

I walk to breathe.
I walk to scream in silence.
I walk to stop myself from picking up the bottle.
From spiraling back into shame’s embrace.

What does it mean when two broken people call each other home?
Was it love? Survival?
Or history?
A scar we made sacred
as she paid the price.
I moved it off the porch today,
where sun falls hard and wide.
The *** is cracked, the roots are weak.
Still, something waits inside.

The blooms were bruised, a weathered pink,
like lips that lost their say.
Still, one had cupped the morning rain
and hadn’t looked away.

My back cried out. I crouched and worked,
Hard knuckles in the dirt.
I cut the dead, I turned the soil,
poured water where it hurt.

I set it by the cedar rail,
where shade and heat align.
Still stiff. Still sore. You’re gone. That holds.
It’s standing. So am I.
I am ready to enter the next stage in my life, where fighting means letting go and allowing things to flow, and life isn't just about survival.
Where change doesn't signify failure, and life opens to me, and I receive it, without fear.
I'm uncertain where this destination will lead me, one thing is for sure, it won't be here...

-Rhia Clay
Zywa Jul 17
At home, we each have our cell
our monastic life dedicated
to words and deeds
My words, his deeds

Walks after work
turning on each other's axis
like spiral trees on the edge
of an abyss

Practical issues
we discuss, the undiscussable
I write down in precise sentences
No endless talk

certainly not about myself
And in my struggle
to be seen
as I am

never using improper
words as a weapon
rather encouraging him
to be his best self
Autobiography "In den vreemde - Kronieken" ("In foreign parts - Chronicles", 2024, Frida Vogels), chapter 'Kees en ik' ('Neil and I') - March 20th, 1983, Bologna

When a trunk grows spirally, each root supplies water to leaves on all sides of the tree, and sugars from each individual branch reach roots on all sides of the tree

Collection "Trench Walking"
Viktoriia Jul 16
how far you've come.
do you remember every sunset
since the arrival of the sun
or do you crave the blessed dark
now more than ever?
the depth of misery's embrace,
the calm it brings, the warmth it takes,
like being stripped of every part of being you.
would you still welcome the collapse
or wait for sunlight to break through?
this grave's too shallow.
do you still wait to be transformed
or are you finally brave enough
to be in charge of your own form?
before the old survival instinct
can dig its claws into your throat,
remember, scars are there to guide you,
not to condemn, but to remind you
how far you've come.
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