In the cathedral of laughter, I parade,
my voice a chime of borrowed delight,
while behind the tapestry of smiles
my marrow hums with unspoken fractures.
Every gesture, rehearsed, lacquered, pristine,
an ornate façade into a carnival of colors
so no one notices the monochrome beneath.
Yet in the hush of solitude,
when chandeliers of silence flicker,
the true self, archaic, wounded,
emerges like a ghost aching for
recognition.
I am both playwright and phantom,
conducting a symphony of counterfeit joys;
an actor in perpetual exile,
haunted by the memory of my untarnished self.
And still, the masquerade continues,
each morning an invocation of artifice,
each night a requiem of the truth
I am too terrified to exhume.