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Madalyn Jan 2018
i'm gonna be 17 tomorrow and i'm no where near being 17. i can't drive. i don't have a job. i don't know who to sign up for the act, much less pass it. i forget to eat. i can't wash my own clothes. i'm a little kid but i'm going to be 17 tomorrow and i'm scared.
Madalyn Jan 2018
i feel like i'm not living a life.
i go to school, i come home, i sleep. i go to school, i come home, i sleep. i go to school, i go to the barn, i ride, i come home, i sleep.
i go to school, i come home, i sleep.
i go to school, i come home, i sleep. i wake up, i go back to sleep.
i wake up, i go to church, i sleep.
i wake up, i do it all over again.
i feel like i'm not living a life.
Madalyn Nov 2017
the instant silence; darkness.
all alone
floating, almost.
just you and your thoughts
under the safe cover of water.
slow and calm
not breathing with lungs
but with the mind.
good thoughts in,
bad thoughts out.
disposing all the negative
and filling up the hollows
with all the positivity
that can fit.
but lungs start to
yell and fill the silence up
with the urgent need
for oxygen,
above the safe cover
of water.
  Jun 2017 Madalyn
Gibson
I can’t write this poem
I can’t write this poem because the last time I opened up to someone artistically they told me it was pretty dark and I should keep it to myself.

I can’t write this poem
I can’t write this poem because I was raised in a culture that was anti love and pro meaningless ***. I saw endless commercials about movies that glamorize a lifestyle in which your body is fulfilled but your heart is ignored and at that impressionable age I learned my heart came second but my allure came first and the less I cared that happier I would be and I carried that belief around with me the way I used to carry around a Bible as a child.

I can’t write this poem
I can’t write this poem because of the time that I opened my father’s phone to reveal a family secret I would hold to this day against my own moral instincts unraveling miles of insecurities wondering if I’m not a good enough daughter or if he stopped loving my mother or if true love was never real and although I had been taught marriage was my purpose, it was what I believed would make me happy, maybe rings aren’t enough to stay in love and maybe people’s feelings change and maybe no one actually has a “one true love” and that this purpose I had been taught was really an endless wild goose chase that only lead to broken families and lost souls.

I can’t write this poem
I can’t write this poem because sometimes I still wonder why I fell into an abyss of toxicity at such a young age. And when I say wonder I don’t mean a trivial ponder, I mean I contemplate every possible reason why the person who I once believed held the universe in her eyes would lie to my face, why she never kissed me in public and our love was always a secret, why she valued girls with blue hair but my blonde hair was not good enough, why I had to hide bruises from my family when I was still in high school or more importantly, why at the time, I thought I deserved them. These thoughts, this lingering paranoia that I am undeserving of healthy love, they muddy my interpretations of real life and distort reality and effect my relationships. My doctor would call these intrusive thoughts, my best friend would tell me they’re symptoms of PTSD, but I have come to realize that I’ve been burned and I am damaged and I hope to god I can recover.

But you,
Oh god, you
You can write this poem. You can be my safety net while I’m free falling in love. You can be the one to listen to my mental tilt-a-whirls, you can be the one that introduces my body and my heart, you can be the one that calms the storms in my mind when I’m questioning the love I’m deserving of. You are the one who makes sure I fall asleep in my bed after drunk nights, you are the one that still sees my value after acknowledging my flaws.
You can write this poem.
  Jun 2017 Madalyn
Sandoval
I was not born a

poet.

I was broken into

one.


*Sandoval

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