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Zachary May 2014
You told me-
I could be honest,
With my emotions

And here I am,
Being blunt

Without shaming me,
Would you have accepted it
As easily as it was to
Flick a knife out of its sheath

But lately,
I learned something from you

That it was okay to cry
It was more than okay to talk
About the beasts that held me down

In simplest terms,
I miss you,
The way a duckling misses it's mother

And that was petty

I wasn't sorry,
For getting attached-
I was sorry,
For letting you know the way I did

When a flower gets its petals ripped
Does it get back up?
Is it useless then after?

Or-
Does it-

What happens then?

I'm sorry,
But I'm not
Zachary May 2014
"Go home" they say

Where is home supposed to be,
When the place you were raised
Was torn down by the devil's hands themselves

The walls dripped with crimson memories,
Stronger than any IV provided in dingy hospitals

Home is fantasized as a comfort
A place to shield yourself from the daily onslaughts

I've become well acquainted with the back of cars
And random beds

"Home is where the heart is"
Well, my heart is set on state-hopping
And on the morphine provided by your luxury

If there's any place I want to stay,
It would be far from you
Zachary May 2014
They told me to watch out for
Boys with owl eyes
And downy hair

They told me to watch out for
Boys who refused no
Who ripped girls
And boys
To shreds and discard them
Like rag dolls

They didn't warn me
What to do
When the one I loved-
The one I created a solar system for-

What to do
When they walked away

What to do
When the black hole
Pranced back into their life

They didn't warn me
About boys with soft hands
And words like venom
Zachary Apr 2014
Rain was a symbol
Of prosperity in ancient times

And that's what you were-
A storm that came in
And blew me back off my feet

Once having solid footing,
But you created a mudslide within

You came in
Like a flurry of ice and anger
Of fire and sadness

And I didn't know what to do

There was nothing to say

I worried if I touched you
I would slip and fall

That happened anyway

It was a gradual decrease
Of the rooms temperature

Rain was a sign of prosperity
But now it's seen as an omen
Winter was never my favorite season
Zachary Apr 2014
You are nicotine
Embedded under my nails

A coat of filth
Superglued under my tongue

A dance of fire
Coated in gasoline

Foam cannot distinguish you

A mystery to behold
Knowledge spanning centuries

Hitting rock bottom
Until you dug below the stone

You were my rock bottom

I never know how to say
Just what it is

Tongue-twisted
And poetry spewing

You were someone
I wasn't looking for
But found in the dead of night
Zachary Mar 2014
The first time I took notice of a magazine, I was in elementary school. I could barely distinguish my S's and my R's. I was only a little girl when my mom gave me my first magazine and told me it was her Bible.

They all started the same way- a supermodel here, a ****** washed out athlete there, and a divorce that made the headlines. I thought to myself that this was normal. That hurt was something that happened nonchalantly, that every beautiful person starved themselves for one reason: to fit in. For publicity. For the money and so-called beauty. For love.

I was in middle school when I realized that all those magazines I picked up over the years were nothing but full of skinny, beautiful woman. Page after page of flawless skin, of perfect hair, and hourglass figures. It was the same year that I realized those women didn't eat. That they hurt themselves on the outside, so they could feel beautiful on the inside.

And I thought to myself, "I want to be exactly like them."

It wasn't until high school that I realized I would never be like them. No matter how much I followed the magazine celebrities like a dog, I couldn't do what they did, follow their actions, or say their words.

Women who aren't women are told they don't matter. That if we don't listen to the men in our lives, then we have no purpose. And if we deviate a fraction of an inch from the chosen path, then we get ostracized.

We get makeup thrown into our faces, and pills to make us thin shoved down our throats, and are forced to wear clothes that show skin- but when those clothes get ripped off, it's suddenly our fault for being skimpy.

The year I turned fifteen, I realized I didn’t need to be a certain way to be okay. I didn’t need to pop pills, or shove a finger down the back of my throat, or skip meals and deny it when asked. I could dress how I wanted, whether that be a dress or trousers, was up to me.

I was barely sixteen when I realized that the magazines lied, that they airbrushed real women into dolls, and that the media didn’t care about real people dying as long as that famous child celebrity lost 10 pounds. That they preferred a 10 day marriage over a civil war or a crackdown. That a man dying of a sudden heart attack was more important than a young girl getting run down.

I was a kid when I realized that the people I looked up to were nothing more than plastic and Photoshop.

That I was nothing more than a scratched up record player waiting to be glued together with a bit of cover up and a bottle of mascara.
Zachary Feb 2014
I inhaled you like
the fumes from a Chevy
saturated my lungs
soiled my insides
and I told you anyway
that you were the oil
that kept me running
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