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#inherited
Before I knew the names of things, she had already placed them inside me. Not gently. Not cruelly either. The way rivers place stone inside their own current. My mother tongue was older than my mother. It passed mouth to mouth through kitchens, funerals, snowbanks blue at dusk. There were words reserved only for weather and death. Others for cattle, scripture, and the careful folding of disappointment. Love itself arrived disguised. Eat before the road. Take the heavier coat. Call when you arrive. The tongue of mothers rarely announces itself as tenderness. It shelters instead. Like earth. Like wool. Like a hand resting briefly on the back of a chair after an argument. I inherited vowels worn smooth by generations of cautious people. People who survived winters by lowering their voices. Even silence had grammar. At the table the dead continued speaking through idiom and proverb, through old regional pronunciations nobody consciously preserved. The language remembered us better than we remembered ourselves. Sometimes I think a mother tongue is less a language than a place returned to in the dark. A lamp above the sink. Boots drying by the stove. Someone clearing their throat in the next room. And every sentence I write still walks back there somehow, mud-footed and uncertain in the blue evening snow.
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May 9
May 9, 2026 at 5:56 PM UTC
Mother Tongue
(what lives in me before I understand) It begins in my body long before my mind arrives. A surge, a flicker, a trembling at the root of me that says: we are already feeling. There is no stillness that does not ripple. No calm that doesn’t carry the hum beneath it - not peace, but a kind of readiness. Like lightning waiting just behind the skin. I used to try to stop it. To breathe it away. To silence it before it unraveled me in front of someone else. But it only grew sharper in the hiding. It only screamed louder the more I tried to be soft. Now, I listen. Not because I’m unafraid, but because I’m done pretending this isn’t me. This intensity - it isn’t a problem. It’s a language. One I’ve been speaking since before I had words. Maybe even longer. Maybe it was handed down, a birthright carved from all the grief my blood couldn’t name. It leaves when it wants to. Returns just as quickly. There is no asking it to stay gone. Only learning not to run when it comes back. And so I live with this current in me. I build small shelters around it. I move gently but not away. I say: I hear you. You don’t have to beg.
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Jul 31, 2025
Jul 31, 2025 at 1:46 PM UTC
Velithrae
I keep throwing up memories no one asked me to keep - bruises shaped like questions, the sound of my mother’s scream lodged behind my ribs. No one tells you grief can rot when you don’t spit it out. That love, untouched, ferments into something sour. I carry it all in my throat ~ half apology, half war cry. You say, “I want more of you.” And my body says, “Are you sure?” Because more of me means bloodstains on carpet, means fists instead of lullabies, means learning how to disappear before I ever learned to speak. I was fed fear in childhood portions, taught to flinch before I felt. I watched my mother burn down her mind, and still tried to build homes in her ashes. I held her wrist when she begged me not to. Took the pills. Took the gun. Took the fall. I was not built for softness but I do crave it. Every tender thing feels foreign, like wearing someone else’s skin. But you touch me like I’m not ruined. And that’s the part that makes me sick. Because what if you mean it? What if love doesn’t have to be a wound I pick at just to feel alive? What if you stay? And worse - what if you don’t? This is my mourning sickness: grieving safety I never had, while choking on the possibility that I could finally be held without having to shatter first.
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Jul 31, 2025
Jul 31, 2025 at 11:06 AM UTC
Mourning Sickness
If Mika is like her Mother The world is a better place, If Mika looks like her Mother Then surely, she has a a beautiful face; And if Mika learns from her Mother She will live in a state of grace.
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Mar 28, 2025
Mar 28, 2025 at 1:39 AM UTC
Mika
To love me is to put up with a messiness I inherited from my mother. The displays of self loathing and self sabotage i work on daily. The clothes I leave on the floor. The coffee cups in the sink. The bed unmade and the too many shoes. To love me is to deal with an annoying amount of independence I inherited from my father. The acts of self serving that I work on daily. The know it all moments when I’m working on something or fixing something. The confidence in my work ethic, my persona & who I am. The laughter I have over everything. To love me is to know the loyalty and respect I’ve inherited from my stepmom. The empathy I still long for and work to find daily. The care over details. The nurture I give when you’re sad or sick. The standing up for you but also putting you in your place. To love me is to cope with the stoic coldness and wandering spirit I’ve inherited from my grandma. The parts of me you’ll never fully know that I work to show you daily. The look of dismay I sometimes don’t know is on my face. The inability to stay in one place for too long without going insane. The moments I want to run away and never look back. To love me is to cope. Cope with knowing sometimes I’m mean. Sometimes I’m sad. And sometimes I love fiercely and passionately. To love me is to love all of me. Everything I’ve inherited and everything I’ve learned and unlearned over time. To love me is to be loved in return.
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Nov 29, 2023
Nov 29, 2023 at 10:02 AM UTC
Loving the Real Me
I can read the lines between your eyes Every emotional hand-me-down ...Relax... Uncrinkle the nose, the mouth and forehead... Throw away those thoughts instead.
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Oct 9, 2021
Oct 9, 2021 at 1:40 AM UTC
Between the lines
When I gaze into the mirror my mother's eyes peer out on the first day with a twinkle on the next a wistful pout Though our eyes are different colors more alike we are then no still her thoughts to me a mystery she may never choose to show The mirror on another day my grandmother becomes watching birds at breakfast saving them the finest crumbs Formidable and frightening she could also often be all too human and imperfect still she helped to make me me Great-grandmother another day the mirror then became though much lighter of complexion now the eyes were much the same Though a humorous and honest soul emotions quite repressed she affects me still more deeply than I ever would have guessed Today within the looking glass the only face I see is the youngest culmination of these elder women three And I see them all within me in my talents and my quirks still I wish that they had taught me how to stay away from jerks.
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Sep 27, 2015
Sep 27, 2015 at 10:46 PM UTC
When I Gaze Into the Mirror