Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
is Sep 2023
In a bedroom in small-town Pennsylvania,
you’ll find an unmade bed,
a pile of clothes on the floor—
clean but not folded,
open drawers and dusty shelves,
a desk in the corner of the room
with pictures laid across it.

When I caught my first fish at six.
I held it at arm’s length by the fishing line
to avoid the slimy scales,
a frown on my face from being forced
to sit silently in the cold.

When my family went to Marco Island,
my sister and I, sifting sand for the best seashells
in our matching swimsuits and hats.
Mom and dad’s fights forgotten in our fun.

High school graduation
posing with my best friend since first grade,
diplomas in one hand and an extra cap held between us
because not everyone survived all four years.

Move-in day at college,
sitting on my raised bed with a grey comforter
and two decorative pillows the color of cotton candy.
Sweat on my brow from southern humidity
and moving furniture without the help of a father.

The pictures are merely snapshots
that lack the full story.

How I learned what it meant for love to fall apart
when I was eight years old.
My sister warned me before it happened,
told me what a divorce was.
I mistook her for joking until they called us upstairs.
Dad cried when they told us, but mom held her tears
until the day he left. The sounds of her cries
escaping from behind a closed door.
“This doesn’t mean we don’t love each other.”
But that’s exactly what it meant.

How I was taught by my father that love is conditional,
and I repeatedly needed to prove myself
through good grades and unquestioning obedience.
Forced to stay home to spend time with the family,
sitting wordlessly on the couch while he watched TV.
Made guilty for wanting to spend time with friends
because that somehow meant that I was a bad daughter.
It’s funny—I never asked myself if he was a good father.

If you look harder at the bedroom,
you’ll find journals filled with bitter words,
screws from disassembled pencil sharpeners, loose razors, and Aquaphor,
food wrappers stuffed in hidden places,
a closet brimming with junk and pairs of shoes,
evidence of a story untold. Until you.
Siren Jan 2018
In my years of motherhood
I’ve pick up on new things
Like no matter how many times I say no
No thank you
No thank you
No thank you

She hears yes
She hears try to feed mom more of it better yet grab her face and make her eat it!
If I say stop
Stop. No thank you
No thank no thank you.
She hears go because mom can’t catch me
Which it’s funny
Until we’re crossing the street and memories I don’t have of my childhood comes back to bite me because I was hit by a car at the age of 4
Kids follow the adult
Kids live by example
For the life of me my daughter can not understand why she doesn’t get to wear deodorant or have to shave
Yet
Yet
It’s impossible to tell my daughter not to scratch when she sees mommy doing it
Poor itchy skin
100 percent cotton
Oatmeal baths and aquaphor
before I knew what it was to be a woman you matured me
So I thank you
Outside of making my hustle harder
You’ve made me realize
How much I sound like my mother
How independence buds young
How what you say echoes
How you repeat what you hear before understanding what the hell it means like what bed bugs actually were meanwhile steady telling each other goodnight don’t let them bite

You made me realize I’m not bulletproof
How much you need me and I need you
How kisses fix boo boos
And hugs dry tears and make everything better
But there’s a not so nice part
I know you’ll tell me you hate me
I’ll explain why you are growing here there and are getting hair everywhere
But that’s the beauty of my motherhood
Not the strongest nor the only single one but I know I’m a **** good one
For the others out there on your grind you deserve all the cookies cakes and a nap
Take in how we make it happen
Take in how we make something out of nothing
Take it how we do it alone
The fight
struggle
Succeed
alone
but really go take a nap
Lily Dec 2023
Somewhere between then and now my sparkly, light up sketchers turned into white air forces. Somewhere between then and now my pink unicorn bed sheets turned into white ones. Somewhere between then and now my puffy pink tutu dress turned into leggings and a sweatshirt. Somewhere between then and now I grew up.
I'm not sure if I knew that was going to be the last time I would take out my barbies to play on my front porch while my mom cooked dinner. I don't know if when my mom walked me and my siblings to the Narberth playground to play as a Friday afternoon surprise she knew she would never take those steps again. I used to daydream about being the age I am today, painting my face with mommy’s make up picturing what it would be like to be able to have my own and use it whenever I want when I get older but now when i think back on that i wish never started putting makeup on i the first place. Maybe it started with putting pink glittery lip gloss on but that harmless lip gloss changed into something much greater. It soon became a question of why are my lips not as pink as those girls or why are my lips smaller than hers. Those questions held so much more weight than one would think because that's when all the other questions of my little 7 year old self started thinking about. I should have been playing out with my siblings but I wasn't sure why my eyebrows looked like a boys or why when you look at my chin closely it looked like a golf ball on top of a frisbee while my friend's chin was defined in one straight line. Very very soon my questions just turned into insecurities and before I knew it I wasn't just my face. Why do my arms stick out like that? Why am I so much taller than everybody around me and why won't people stop talking about it? Why do my legs do that when I sit down in a chair? It was never just my imagination picking stuff out of me that needed to change. They started out with the way I have little bumps on my nose so I covered them up with foundation. Then my lashes were too short so I would curl them and put mascara on them. My lips are crusty. Oh ok i'll put loads of aquaphor on them while i sleep and then cover them up with pink lip oil in the morning. Oh. She said now I wear too much makeup and it looks cakey. Ok it's fine i'll just work all night to make my skin glowy and do “natural” makeup in the morning. Oh no! Now this boy said that I don't take care of myself and I don't care about what I look like. I'll go a little heavier on the makeup but still not too much so that she doesnt start calling me cake face again. That's when I start to remember putting on that pink glitter lip gloss. I don't want to get any older now. Of course I'm excited to drive, and go to college but I just can't stop thinking about how my life will never be anything like it used to be.
It tickles my brain a little bit to think about how I see the same girl that I used to play princess with passed out in someone's front yard. In 3rd grade I got in a fight with this one girl who used my bookmark instead of her own and it was the worst thing that happened to me that month. I would give so much to have a fight like that again or  honestly just to have any fight about opinions on frozen rather than be about my best friend kissing her boyfriend and lying about it to me. I would give everything to be able to go back but it's too late. I grew up too fast.

— The End —