Monday, May 11, 2020

Branches

5/11/2020


“Just hang on!” They tell me,
while holding tight onto their own branches filled with luscious leaves and sumptuous fruit.
Their branches’ circumference easily withstands the heaviness of their burdens,
not even drooping in the slightest.
They sway effortlessly within the wind of their sentiments,
never battered or losing even the tiniest of leaves in the storms.
Their branches are legitimately alluring.
So strong. So confident. So durable.
I can understand why they hold on-
they have no reason to let go.

“Just hang on!” They tell me,
trying their hardest to help my diminutive branch gain some kind of girth.
Their surplus of leaves disrupt their view of mine sometimes,
just quick enough for them to get a glimpse of relief that at least I’m still there.
What they can’t see is how fast my grip is steadily sliding.
I want to hold on, I do,
but I’m tired.
So tired of watching my sweat turn into blood pooling into the tips of my fingers.
So exhausted of having nothing but disintegrating slivers of branches to hold on to.
I’m slipping and I can’t help it.
My branches have drooped too far,
they are breaking.
This is all beyond my control.
I have come to the end of my branch.
There is nothing left to do
but to let go.

“Just hang on!” They say.
“But for what?!?” I scream.

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

The Door

5/6/2020


I grew tired of keeping it open all the time.
The draft from his ghost was nearly unbearable.
Although it seemed but a breeze to some,
it had a tendency to bring me to my knees
every single time it wisped past my memory.

My hands grew calloused with splinters from the wood of his disdain.
My feet became bloodied with blisters from being the wedge between his abandonments.
My reactions intensified with immediate palpitations from the daggers in his mendacious eyes.
My core is becoming weaker by the minute trying to keep you from opening this creaky door.

With all of my might, I hold myself against it,
sweat pouring from my skin.
My battle going unnoticed,
with the wood stains beginning to camouflage my despondency.
I am slowly losing this fight,
while you maniacally knock at a tune too catchy to ignore.

I just can’t.
I can’t open myself up to you,
because I know the second that I do,
your curious knocking will instantaneously stop in absolute disgust
as I reveal the woman I really am just waiting
behind the door.

Monday, May 4, 2020

The Thread

5/3/2020
For Mom:



We were once woven so tightly.
Wrapped up into a cozy, familiar blanket
that kept us warm from the inside out.
Your consistent threads of validation intertwined
with your needles of grace that maintained us as the devoted unit
we would always be known for.

We were once woven so tightly.
Becoming a well-preserved heirloom
passed down from many different patches.
Your jovial and cordial thread sewing us together,
making our blanket unbelievably spectacular
with you at the center of it all.

We were once woven so tightly,
but your perpetual weaving suddenly took its toll.
Your hands became weaker,
with knuckles too inflamed to add any more of your glorious threads.
And just as we were becoming confident in our blanket,
your essential force became unexpectedly absent,
leaving us without a pattern to follow.

We were once woven so tightly,
but you were the thread that,
once loosened,
we all came undone.

Good Enough


Good Enough 5/3/2020

I think I’m pretty
enough.
I think I’m funny
enough.
I think I can carry a conversation well
enough.
I think I’m a good catch.
Well, a good enough catch.
I think I’m bound to find him one day. I know he will be
enough.

I’m crammed in between the corners of my imagination and reality.
Straddling the lines between just right and almost there.
Wedged between convincing beginnings and suspicious conclusions.
Balancing acts of showing my true colors and watching everyone strain to see its rainbow.

I think I’ve shown
enough.
I think I’ve dreamt long
enough.
I think I’ve done
enough.
I think I’ve always been almost
enough.

I think I’ve been through
enough
to know that I’ve had
enough
of wondering why being
enough
is never good
enough.