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Cynthia Feb 21
“Never love anyone more than yourself,”
Mom always said that to me.
When it came to relationships,
she always saved 10% of herself.

That’s where I got it from—
my issues to trust,
to give, and to
fully envelop myself.

She taught me to be cautious of
those I let into my life—
those who held knives behind their backs
and drew me in with sweet words.

She also taught me to stay strong,
that even if people left my life,
I was never alone.



Ma had her own struggles.
She never talked about it openly,
not even to Dad.
She kept the facade of a strong woman
and rarely shared her vulnerability.

It made me feel so invalidated
in my own struggles.
I felt isolated because I thought
I wasn’t supposed to feel this way.
Since she never shared her experiences,
I never knew she too
suffered.

She did a hell of a good job at it though,
better than me.
When it came down to it,
she never cried.
Not even when the dog died.

She wasn’t much of an emotional woman.
“Crying is for the weak.”
The worst part is…
I believed her.

The only reason she felt this way
was because, as a young girl,
she was never to share
her wars.

But when I see her dance—
oh, she shines so bright.
Her radiating aura
surrounds her.
I can feel it.
In the flicker of her eye,
in the rasp of her laugh,
I can see it.
In the lines of her smile
and her white hairs.
She’s just as young as she was
yesterday,
and the day before,
all the way to the little girl she used to know.

She’s everything she claims not to be…
Human
Cynthia Feb 21
If you cut open my arm,
I would bleed out poetry.
Lines of sacred poems from authors such as Bukowski, Maya Angelou, Mary Oliver.

I am a poem.
I like to think of my life that way.
Romanticizing it
makes it a little more bearable.

Maybe it’s easier to
articulate my thoughts,
when it rhymes.

It’s easier to express myself
in vague terms
and mysterious stories.

Poetry is my favorite dead language.
Rarely seen nowadays,
yet still stays so beautiful.

Exotic in its nature,
but exquisite in it’s simplicity.

It explains my most vigorous notions into gentle and sweet words.
Music to my ears.

My writings of poetry feels like
saying sorry before I threw the rock.
Kissing before stabbing.

My poetry is raw
and unfiltered.
A gentle ray of sunshine,
that also burns at the touch.
Yet you can’t move because it’s so entrancing,
you know it doesn’t mean to hurt you
it just does.
A kind of unintentional love bomb.

My poetry is a reflection of who I am,
my aspirations and goals.
Struggles and flaws,
challenges and obstacles,
but also my good moments.
Where I truly feel alive.

It’s also a reflection of others through me.
My parents and family.
Famous poets, authors, musicians.
People I look up to.
I am just a filtered version of them.
While still being authentically myself.

Ultimately my poetry is who I am.
Painfully tender
and
Sourly sweet.
As I am all of the contradictions within myself.
Cynthia Feb 21
The night that she died, she was in my arms. We were in the hospital bed. We both knew this was the end—all the months of pain, the endless treatments, the medication. Every hour I spent taking care of her was for the smallest chance that she might get to see another day.

That whole night, we stayed intertwined in that small, stiff hospital bed. She caressed my hair and whispered memories from when I was a child. She talked about how happy she was with the life she lived. In that moment, it felt like things were fine—like maybe, somehow, she could miraculously heal. But we both knew the truth.

I spent my part apologizing, begging, loving. I spent my part regretting. I kept looking at her, then the clock, back and forth, praying for just one more day. I begged her not to sleep, knowing that once she did, it would happen. She HAD to die, and I couldn’t understand why.

She held me as I cried against her chest, like a child, sobbing and pleading with the universe to trade our places. Then she went cold.

I looked at her. And I realized—this was it. She had left.

I was sixteen, lying in that cold, cramped hospital bed, holding my mother’s lifeless body, wishing for a different world.

The day of the funeral, I was surrounded by people offering their condolences. As sweet as they tried to be, I was bitter. I rejected their help. I wanted to be alone. The worst part was the strangers—people who didn’t even know her—standing up and speaking for her. Speaking about who she was, like they could ever understand.

I ran out of the church and kicked over a trash can. I fell to my knees, sobbing, screaming silently to the sky: “Mom, I wish things were different.” “Mom, I wish I’d shown you how much I loved you.” “Mom… you were everything.”

When they buried her, it felt like a seal. This was final. No countdowns, no approximations, no hovering uncertainty—just an undeniable fact. She was gone.

After everyone left, I stayed behind. I knelt in front of her grave, pressing my head against the cold tombstone, hugging it like I could somehow feel her warmth again. I clawed at the dirt, burying my hands in the grass like I could dig her out. I knew she wasn’t there, but I couldn’t accept that she was really gone.

She would never see me walk down the aisle to the song I’d told her about since I was a kid. She would never meet the people I promised to introduce her to in college. She would never see me graduate high school.

And I hated her for that.

Even though it wasn’t her fault, I hated it.

It was easier to point fingers, to be bitter, to blame the universe, God, or fate. Even if, deep down, I knew there was no one to blame.
Cynthia Feb 21
I’m sorry. Two simple words that speak measures about the things I didn’t say.

Dad.
I’m sorry that I couldn’t have been a better person.
I couldn’t always keep my room clean or keep my grades high.
I wasn’t always the easiest person to talk to or even understand.
I didn’t make life for you easier, and for that: I’m sorry.

Brother.
I’m sorry I said words I didn’t mean and didn’t fully understand how much they affected you.
I rejected your forms of affection and care because I thought I didn’t deserve them.
I pointed fingers and made empty promises without justification.
I spoke to you bitterly and harshly, and for that: I’m sorry.

Mom.
I’m sorry. To you the most, I’m sorry.
I wasn’t the daughter you wanted me to be.
I turned my back on your advice and guidance.
We often fought over views that didn’t align.
We were two opposites, but unlike magnets, I didn’t fight to make us connect.
And for that: I’m sorry.

To all those I have hurt:
I’m sorry.
I wasn’t the person you needed me to be.
I couldn’t be more, even when I wanted to.
But I hope you know I loved you,
in all the ways I knew how,
even if it wasn’t enough.
Cynthia Feb 21
To be human means to suffer.
To fight for a permanent fulfillment that never truly existed.

No matter how perfect my roadmap is,
it will never follow that predestined trajectory.

This was a hard truth to accept because
humans have a fragile need to control.
It might be their ego or pride,
but when things don’t bend their way they get enraged.

They become too deeply attached to this impossible idea of perfection.
It’s just that life is so imperfectly beautiful and complicated,
but that’s the best part.

Embracing the unpredictability of life means to acknowledge that…
no matter how hard life gets,
it has a funny way of letting things fall just right where they were meant to be.

This doesn’t justify the cruelty of the world.
The genocides in Rwanda,
war on Israel,
millions dead and injured,
worldwide injustice.

It’s also important to realize that cruelty was not natures fault,
it was us.
We created the evil in the world,
but just try not to be the cause of it.

Learning how to live with cruelty is vital. Realizing that life wasn’t ever meant for death,
but it has it anyways.
It is important to balance these two points.

Accepting the hardships that come with life means living truly at peace.
This also doesn’t change the fact that life is difficult,
it just makes it more tolerable.
Cynthia Feb 21
Love is the person that cared.

Love is the person who remembers
my favorite candy
while passing by it at a gas station aisle.

Love is the person who taught me
kindness—
that despite my own ignorance,
I should still treat others well.

Love is the person who stayed
when it was tough,
when I felt the heavy weight of life,
and made it just a bit lighter.

Love is our inside jokes
and knowing glances,
how we understood each other’s
unspoken words
like second nature.

Love was all the second chances,
every opportunity you gave me
for redemption,
no matter how bad it was.

Love was all the silent car rides,
the radio playing slow,
when the world seemed to stop,
and it was just us.

Love was the trust I gave you,
the heart-to-hearts,
and the depth we shared.

Love was the person holding me close
when I didn’t want to be alive,
the one who reassured me
when everything fell apart.

Over time, I learned—
love isn’t always romantic,
it isn’t always chocolate boxes
or red roses.

Love was those intimate moments
we shared.

Love is holding on,
even when it it felt tough.

Love was my family and friends—
because despite everything,
we held on.
Cynthia Feb 21
When will it ever be enough?

As a kid, I was always taught to reach my potential—
to set goals above my expectations
and work hard to become a better version of myself.

But when will this version be enough?
When do I finally come to terms with myself?
Will I ever be at peace with whom I’ve come to be.
Satisfied with the person I’ve built for years?

When will I learn to accept
that I don’t have to be at constant war with myself
for simply being normal?

As Mary Oliver once said:
“You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.”

But in this society, it feels impossible.

They’ve linked the term mediocre
with failure,
and so, at night,
many stare at their ceiling,
feeling like a let-down,
simply because they couldn’t be more.

It’s why elderly men don’t retire—
because even at their age,
they’re expected to keep improving.

But what if we chose instead
to normalize self-acceptance?
What if we allowed ourselves
to recognize the effort
that carried us to where we are today?

It’s okay if you’re not the next millionaire.
You don’t have to be the next Albert Einstein.

So many tell us that life is about growth—
a constant journey of becoming better.
And maybe they’re right.
But life is also too short
to live with the endless mindset
of wanting to complete everything
in the span of one lifetime.

We must learn to appreciate.
To slow down,
and build our own meaning.

Because it never depended on anyone else.
It didn’t matter
when your boss labeled you as ‘replaceable’
It didn’t matter
when you anticipated that raise
and never got it.
It didn’t matter
when you hit rock bottom
and struggled to stand again.

Remember this:
Being human never made you weak.
It made you uniquely capable
of becoming stronger.

Life is what you make of it—
not what others call average,
but what you choose to see as
success.
A short poem about the weight of societies standards
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