Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
#courtroom
i'm living in a courtroom the sides of my mind in a constant battle the judge, my hands making the final decision of if to tie the knot or take the pills or make the cut the prosecution, my depression making the case that i should be punished for my pitiful existence with "immediate termination" the defense, hope defending my right to life arguing that the darkness doesn't make the possibility of light impossible the first witness for the prosecution is him the man— no, sorry, boy— no, sorry, creature— the creature with the rough hands and unsatisfiable drive that shattered my porcelain, breakable sculpture he testifies that i was never more than an object a means to an end and now? well, now my purpose has been served i'm used up dried out and the world is getting overpopulated... the defense calls my best friend to the stand she brings an orange tells me to eat even in the middle of the chaos the trial her eyes are on me tracing the way i peel the fruit engraining it into her mind knowing the same hands may soon become the perpetrators she clears her throat to plead reason but doesn't look away from me she sees me choking on the juice and begs me to give her the sour parts the prosecution is not deterred my scars are put in the spotlight jagged lines etched across my skin proving my mind's betrayal and when brain and body are separated well, am i even human at that point? or just a monster hiding in plain sight covering the evidence with long sleeves and weak stories after all, who could ever love a girl who can't love herself? the response is to bring in a 7-year-old she smiles at everyone in the room a contagious light shining through oblivious to her own future's fate hanging in the balance the defense doesn't ask her any deep questions instead letting her babble on about how she's going to be a doctor or a teacher or an actor or a detective or a writer when she's done and out of the room they turn to the room and ask "that girl has imagined a million futures. shouldn't she get at least one?" but when it comes time for closing remarks hope has disappeared and the prosecution takes over pointing out every little mistake every inconvenience every place where i should've taken up a little less space concluding that the world would truly be better off without me and now it's just a waiting game the jury is still out debating the final verdict i'm caught in the crosshairs not partial to either outcome just impatient for a decision
0
7d ago
May 28, 2026 at 2:21 AM UTC
courtroom
i'm living in a courtroom the sides of my mind in a constant battle the judge, my hands making the final decision of if to tie the knot or take the pills or make the cut the prosecution, my depression making the case that i should be punished for my pitiful existence with "immediate termination" the defense, hope defending my right to life arguing that the darkness doesn't make the possibility of light impossible the first witness for the prosecution is him the man— no, sorry, boy— no, sorry, creature— the creature with the rough hands and unsatisfiable drive that shattered my porcelain, breakable sculpture he testifies that i was never more than an object a means to an end and now? well, now my purpose has been served i'm used up dried out and the world is getting overpopulated... the defense calls my best friend to the stand she brings an orange tells me to eat even in the middle of the chaos the trial her eyes are on me tracing the way i peel the fruit engraining it into her mind knowing the same hands may soon become the perpetrators she clears her throat to plead reason but doesn't look away from me she sees me choking on the juice and begs me to give her the sour parts the prosecution is not deterred my scars are put in the spotlight jagged lines etched across my skin proving my mind's betrayal and when brain and body are separated well, am i even human at that point? or just a monster hiding in plain sight covering the evidence with long sleeves and weak stories after all, who could ever love a girl who can't love herself? the response is to bring in a 7-year-old she smiles at everyone in the room a contagious light shining through oblivious to her own future's fate hanging in the balance the defense doesn't ask her any deep questions instead letting her babble on about how she's going to be a doctor or a teacher or an actor or a detective or a writer when she's done and out of the room they turn to the room and ask "that girl has imagined a million futures. shouldn't she get at least one?" but when it comes time for closing remarks hope has disappeared and the prosecution takes over pointing out every little mistake every inconvenience every place where i should've taken up a little less space concluding that the world would truly be better off without me and now it's just a waiting game the jury is still out debating the final verdict i'm caught in the crosshairs not partial to either outcome just impatient for a decision
Continue reading...
94
The stone was grey, the prophet worn, Between the oath and crown of thorn. He did not curse, he did not shout, He knew what law was all about. It loves the robe, the seal, the chair, The scripted oath, the powdered hair. It weighs the ink, ignores the bruise, Counts the rules but not the ruse. Blindfold tied with threads of gold, It worships precedent grown old. It feeds on fear, on stamped decree, But starves the root of equity. The widow weeps in silent rooms, Her truth dismissed in legal tombs. The liar smiles articulate, Well-trained in posture, well-taught fate. And justice, bound in polished chains, Pretends she does not hear the pains. For law is not a beating heart It is a theatre of art. And those who master mask and tone Can turn a lie to cornerstone. Yet somewhere in the marrow deep, A quieter judgment does not sleep. No wig, no bench, no scripted plea But scales that tilt by what must be. Not what was filed. Not what was said. But what was done And who has bled.
0
Mar 3
Mar 3, 2026 at 12:27 AM UTC
Carved on the wall of a courtroom by a tired prophet
a book titled _the comfort book_ carries silver-tongued truths disguised as preachings offering some peace. turns out reading what's already known is like seeing the result on paper— having exclaimed, i won't believe unless it's shown. can i slip in, as a matter of fact, the moon is suing me for emotional damage and all the pressure i've brought upon it, forthwith, with immediate effect? she left a letter this morning while leaving to hide in her contrary's presence— a cease and desist nailed to the door of my self. she claimed i'd stared too long, longingly enough she’d started to feel bare, and seen me stark naked as i whispered my dire lies to the night air. she felt used. perhaps i committed a crime. so i admitted, and asked for apologies. except i was sent a summon, to present myself and the plead-not-guilty note. the stars—she put as the jury, the night sky her lawyer, the sun as the judge—he held fury. i presented myself, humor disguising my truth, but when they brought the memories to the witness box, i knew i was done for—eloquently misjudged and overlooked. had to take an oath, but they lied under it even. promised nothing was wrong. i saw right through their plotting. i aimed for the time reversing, pleading guilty, admitting innocence. my shadow whispered secrets i haven't lived yet— and they brought her to cross-examine: no one else but my imaginary friend. she was mad. mad for being forgotten and left. so i did the next best thing: tore my skin, let her scavenge through the inside. she felt for the way my veins pulsed, and admitted i was right. _speaking the truth, your honor,_ i smiled at the moon, but felt guilty for not seeing it sooner. the universe had glitched— whenever i cried, it glitched, sent down a star to wipe my eyes dry. in doing so, the stars suffered, and the moon, without her supporters, lost her glimmer. she lost her friends, as i lost my own. and no, she wasn’t angry— just a bit tensed, for she'd seen what happened to my hope. the lawsuit resulted in me being freed. i stood up, walked over, and gave her a tight hug— the trial of chaos, and of giving life to non-existent hope. she handed me _the book of comfort,_ written in white on a black page. it glistened. the often misplaced truths hide in the bright. so accept them as you may— they could be sour, bitter, expired to taste, but breathing in the venom is one way to make sure you don’t repeat the same mistakes. and so this was my tale, held in the celestial court. i missed everything—except that i was forlorn, not too long ago. i still sit at nights and stare at her, but this time, she lends her own shoulder. the stars scribble it down: surrealism meets emotional rundown. ominous as though it might seem, this fits like a verdict-stamped "not guilty" in my very being.
0
Jul 22, 2025
Jul 22, 2025 at 1:42 PM UTC
held in the celestial court
a book titled _the comfort book_ carries silver-tongued truths disguised as preachings offering some peace. turns out reading what's already known is like seeing the result on paper— having exclaimed, i won't believe unless it's shown. can i slip in, as a matter of fact, the moon is suing me for emotional damage and all the pressure i've brought upon it, forthwith, with immediate effect? she left a letter this morning while leaving to hide in her contrary's presence— a cease and desist nailed to the door of my self. she claimed i'd stared too long, longingly enough she’d started to feel bare, and seen me stark naked as i whispered my dire lies to the night air. she felt used. perhaps i committed a crime. so i admitted, and asked for apologies. except i was sent a summon, to present myself and the plead-not-guilty note. the stars—she put as the jury, the night sky her lawyer, the sun as the judge—he held fury. i presented myself, humor disguising my truth, but when they brought the memories to the witness box, i knew i was done for—eloquently misjudged and overlooked. had to take an oath, but they lied under it even. promised nothing was wrong. i saw right through their plotting. i aimed for the time reversing, pleading guilty, admitting innocence. my shadow whispered secrets i haven't lived yet— and they brought her to cross-examine: no one else but my imaginary friend. she was mad. mad for being forgotten and left. so i did the next best thing: tore my skin, let her scavenge through the inside. she felt for the way my veins pulsed, and admitted i was right. _speaking the truth, your honor,_ i smiled at the moon, but felt guilty for not seeing it sooner. the universe had glitched— whenever i cried, it glitched, sent down a star to wipe my eyes dry. in doing so, the stars suffered, and the moon, without her supporters, lost her glimmer. she lost her friends, as i lost my own. and no, she wasn’t angry— just a bit tensed, for she'd seen what happened to my hope. the lawsuit resulted in me being freed. i stood up, walked over, and gave her a tight hug— the trial of chaos, and of giving life to non-existent hope. she handed me _the book of comfort,_ written in white on a black page. it glistened. the often misplaced truths hide in the bright. so accept them as you may— they could be sour, bitter, expired to taste, but breathing in the venom is one way to make sure you don’t repeat the same mistakes. and so this was my tale, held in the celestial court. i missed everything—except that i was forlorn, not too long ago. i still sit at nights and stare at her, but this time, she lends her own shoulder. the stars scribble it down: surrealism meets emotional rundown. ominous as though it might seem, this fits like a verdict-stamped "not guilty" in my very being.
Continue reading...
71
I told the stars to shut up. They weren’t witnesses. They were worse. They kept spelling your name, blinking slow, like pity, glinting gallant- like that ever saved anyone. I walked past the summer we called ours like I wasn’t still stalking it. Like I didn’t prowl on purpose, like I didn’t rehearse your alibi, like I didn’t pray (for prey.) I was fine with the trees, the oil stains, the way the sun pretended nothing happened. I could go days without hearing an ice cream truck, or seeing a sun-burnt stranger and thinking: maybe the universe rerouted you into someone I could almost survive. You once said I was dangerous. And by once I mean I wrote it down and heard it forever. It’s in my lymph nodes, in the poems you pretend not to read. It’s in the version of me you kept almost loving but never quite chose. You called us perilous. Or maybe I did. It’s hard to tell, since I’ve been writing you with your mouth shut for months. I keep checking the margins for your voice. All I got were the noises people make when they’re trying not to drown, but pretending to wave. Why is your name still more siren than sentence? Still more blood than bruise? I made your absence a body I slept beside, because I kept waking up guilty. I never served, but I wrote the ending. Put my hand on a Bible, bit my tongue so hard the truth still tastes like you. Wore borrowed pearls, and swore to God I never loved you more than the day you didn’t show up. I would’ve done time for you. I would’ve confessed to a crime that didn’t exist just to hold your hand once on the courthouse steps. You said I was dangerous. You were right. But not in the way you thought. I told the whole truth- just not out loud. You didn’t get convicted. But I still can’t go back to that summer without thinking the tan lines were warning signs, without getting subpoenaed by the sky. Some nights, your name still tries to get in like a burglar. I play dead, tell the stars to shut up. But they unlock the window anyway. They spell you out in light like they want me to remember how it felt to be the crime scene.
0
Jun 15, 2025
Jun 15, 2025 at 9:12 AM UTC
She Was Dangerous, Your Honor
I told the stars to shut up. They weren’t witnesses. They were worse. They kept spelling your name, blinking slow, like pity, glinting gallant- like that ever saved anyone. I walked past the summer we called ours like I wasn’t still stalking it. Like I didn’t prowl on purpose, like I didn’t rehearse your alibi, like I didn’t pray (for prey.) I was fine with the trees, the oil stains, the way the sun pretended nothing happened. I could go days without hearing an ice cream truck, or seeing a sun-burnt stranger and thinking: maybe the universe rerouted you into someone I could almost survive. You once said I was dangerous. And by once I mean I wrote it down and heard it forever. It’s in my lymph nodes, in the poems you pretend not to read. It’s in the version of me you kept almost loving but never quite chose. You called us perilous. Or maybe I did. It’s hard to tell, since I’ve been writing you with your mouth shut for months. I keep checking the margins for your voice. All I got were the noises people make when they’re trying not to drown, but pretending to wave. Why is your name still more siren than sentence? Still more blood than bruise? I made your absence a body I slept beside, because I kept waking up guilty. I never served, but I wrote the ending. Put my hand on a Bible, bit my tongue so hard the truth still tastes like you. Wore borrowed pearls, and swore to God I never loved you more than the day you didn’t show up. I would’ve done time for you. I would’ve confessed to a crime that didn’t exist just to hold your hand once on the courthouse steps. You said I was dangerous. You were right. But not in the way you thought. I told the whole truth- just not out loud. You didn’t get convicted. But I still can’t go back to that summer without thinking the tan lines were warning signs, without getting subpoenaed by the sky. Some nights, your name still tries to get in like a burglar. I play dead, tell the stars to shut up. But they unlock the window anyway. They spell you out in light like they want me to remember how it felt to be the crime scene.
Continue reading...
83
I would like to call my first witness to the stand,  Will the characteristic name selfish please stand, "Is it true, that you believe the world revolves around you? If so , how can a ***** even evolve around you?, That's why in conversation ****** tolk around you,  Because if he cant walk with ****** will walk around you, That's meant exactly how it sounds too, Always jumping to conclusions without sound proof, Know how to hit me where it hurts ,with such a profound tooth, Then when my feelings are revealed,  you become soundproof?" You know how to **** me softly , you're well known for your silky execution, and you like a story , Never been one for the hasty resolution, And for that alone is why im seeking  Restitution, This is it. the Jury is hung, My mind is out of it but my heart? Its  latching on to you like the song that Sam sung, There's been too much time lost playin victim,  Which is why I'm here to ask that you wave this indictment, Not gonna lie and say that there is no need for conviction, The truth is your honor,  that SHE. SHE is my addiction , Not a day goes by when I don't think about her, I never say never but I never saw me without her, But To be Frank , its tragic what she got up in her attic, I've had it with the dramatics, it's like her formulas quadratic, My mind is filled with static, I tried to hit the box for clarity, I planned 100 different ways of asking her to marry me, But I could never get the timing right your majesty, Then it all fell apart , miraculous, no magically.
0
Jan 29, 2021
Jan 29, 2021 at 5:00 PM UTC
Case Closed III (Cross Examination)
I would like to call my first witness to the stand,  Will the characteristic name selfish please stand, "Is it true, that you believe the world revolves around you? If so , how can a ***** even evolve around you?, That's why in conversation ****** tolk around you,  Because if he cant walk with ****** will walk around you, That's meant exactly how it sounds too, Always jumping to conclusions without sound proof, Know how to hit me where it hurts ,with such a profound tooth, Then when my feelings are revealed,  you become soundproof?" You know how to **** me softly , you're well known for your silky execution, and you like a story , Never been one for the hasty resolution, And for that alone is why im seeking  Restitution, This is it. the Jury is hung, My mind is out of it but my heart? Its  latching on to you like the song that Sam sung, There's been too much time lost playin victim,  Which is why I'm here to ask that you wave this indictment, Not gonna lie and say that there is no need for conviction, The truth is your honor,  that SHE. SHE is my addiction , Not a day goes by when I don't think about her, I never say never but I never saw me without her, But To be Frank , its tragic what she got up in her attic, I've had it with the dramatics, it's like her formulas quadratic, My mind is filled with static, I tried to hit the box for clarity, I planned 100 different ways of asking her to marry me, But I could never get the timing right your majesty, Then it all fell apart , miraculous, no magically.
Continue reading...
29
If courtroom benches and chairs could talk they would scream out. "We heard enough. The Judicial system needs to be revamped to bring freedom back, and arrest the corruption. They can’t talk but a poet can and has.
0
Apr 21, 2019
Apr 21, 2019 at 2:46 PM UTC
Court Room
Delusional. Bipolar. Schizophrenic. Unable to provide for the basic necessities of life. Condemned. I sat just outside The decrepit courtroom, Staring at the middle aged children; G-d's miracles. A soft voice startled me from below. I saw a broken man in front of me kneeling On the floor. "I am Methuselah"  he whispered. "May I wash your feet?" I think I recognized him. Two weeks before in the crowded courtroom He had bared His soul before everyone, Yet they would not let him leave. I remember pieces of my conversation with the bailiff, "Can you imagine living his permanent nightmare? Can you imagine Believing that your parents are dead, Mourning for so many years? Then hearing your sister testify That they are still alive? And knowing . . . she is lying, So that they can lock you up again?" "Excuse me, sir. I saw you from across The room; there is a holiness about you. May I wash your feet?" I looked into his face, His glassy eyes, his trembling lips. I don't know why But at that moment he reminded me of a boy. I wanted to help him, To cure him, to raise him up, to help him see. I wanted to remind him of his name. "No thank you."  I told him. "Please sit down." He gingerly took the seat beside me. "A fate has befallen me. I do not know . . . " He seemed to struggle for command Of his words, I wanted to reach out to him, to make him feel necessary. "Methuselah is a name in the Bible. . ." But words failed me as well. What right did I have; who permitted me to trespass On his life? If I was helping him, why did I feel so guilty? "Something holy about you   Drew me over here. Who are you? Can you tell me how to find love?" We talked together then, About his family, his marriage, love, and G-d. He wrote down his address as they came to take him home Then smiled as if for the first time. A few minutes later, lost in thought I looked at the wrinkled Brown paper he had torn From his bag and read his name. It did not say Methuselah.
0
Jul 27, 2017
Jul 27, 2017 at 10:52 AM UTC
Methusaleh
Delusional. Bipolar. Schizophrenic. Unable to provide for the basic necessities of life. Condemned. I sat just outside The decrepit courtroom, Staring at the middle aged children; G-d's miracles. A soft voice startled me from below. I saw a broken man in front of me kneeling On the floor. "I am Methuselah"  he whispered. "May I wash your feet?" I think I recognized him. Two weeks before in the crowded courtroom He had bared His soul before everyone, Yet they would not let him leave. I remember pieces of my conversation with the bailiff, "Can you imagine living his permanent nightmare? Can you imagine Believing that your parents are dead, Mourning for so many years? Then hearing your sister testify That they are still alive? And knowing . . . she is lying, So that they can lock you up again?" "Excuse me, sir. I saw you from across The room; there is a holiness about you. May I wash your feet?" I looked into his face, His glassy eyes, his trembling lips. I don't know why But at that moment he reminded me of a boy. I wanted to help him, To cure him, to raise him up, to help him see. I wanted to remind him of his name. "No thank you."  I told him. "Please sit down." He gingerly took the seat beside me. "A fate has befallen me. I do not know . . . " He seemed to struggle for command Of his words, I wanted to reach out to him, to make him feel necessary. "Methuselah is a name in the Bible. . ." But words failed me as well. What right did I have; who permitted me to trespass On his life? If I was helping him, why did I feel so guilty? "Something holy about you   Drew me over here. Who are you? Can you tell me how to find love?" We talked together then, About his family, his marriage, love, and G-d. He wrote down his address as they came to take him home Then smiled as if for the first time. A few minutes later, lost in thought I looked at the wrinkled Brown paper he had torn From his bag and read his name. It did not say Methuselah.
Continue reading...
64