DÉTAILS
• He left another note
• This time it only said, ‘Goin’ fishin’
• How long would he be gone?
• She asked, & thought to her self
• Why did she leave her life as an elf?
• Her time in the North Pole was fun
• Even with the little amount of sun
• She had lots of friends there
• Who were always ready to cheer her
• And share the fish they caught—
• Wishing that she was back up North
• With her fellow sweet elves
• Who did not like sitting on shelves!
• If she packed all her things
• And left a note on the fridge-
• She wondered~ would he be pleased?
#DÉTAILS
#ListPoemChallenge
12.07.2020 Sundae
sips of spilled milk
The moon presses his face up to my window, his breath fogging up the glass. I peel back the fog and wrap myself in its glistening threads, letting shudders march in a single file down my spine. His shadow spills milk on the unforgiving tile, and it’s laced with gossamer cataracts that I try to rub from my own eyes. The moon scoops up the milk and flees, ducking behind a lingering cloud. He leaves a drop. I drink it.
The stars squint and blink from their peepholes in the sky, their sparks of movement trailed by two pupils. Trembling sighs weave through my hair, one for each star’s wish to be on my side of the drapery we call the sky. They claim that they’ve been on this side before, but I don’t know if it’s true (they've claimed to be diamonds before). I only know that when I imagine flying up to theirs, my sighs can braid my hair. Stars are bigger than what the gaps show. I’ve heard them say that they are one, and they’re called the sun.
The night is the day’s velvet back. She stands before us, her face turned away to gaze at what could have been. Her other side fools us. Afraid of the dark, we drive her away, wielding counterfeit suns poorly modeled after her own heart.
Pen to Paper: Pent-up Prose.
Covid-19 landed me in my seat - my writing seat. I put my writing hat on and started writing.
There’s nothing like living alone during a quarantine to help you bleed pain onto a “page.”
Writing became my outlet, my only solace. And just like that, I got a “like” on my first post. I had written a piece for the April 2020 Challenge, sponsored by Prose. My first piece on Prose. in two years.
Ever since I was sixteen, I’ve been searching for writing contests online. I felt like I had a voice. Like my experiences needed validity. Like my mental illness needed some kind of retelling, like no one on the planet knew what depression felt like. Or what it meant to suffer.
But let’s flash forward to 2018.
On one particular afternoon in Boston, Massachusetts, a decade after I turned sixteen, on an afternoon that hit a hundred degrees - not only sweat poured out of me, but the desire to share what I had just experienced.
It’s not worth getting into, but I had just seriously scared the members of my group therapy session. I had done something because I felt I had no voice.
Then I found Prose. My first rodeo with the website, my first stab at recognition. At recognizing myself.
While I sat on my couch that afternoon in the summer of 2018, sticking to my couch, I thought, maybe if I write about my experiences, they will be real. Someone might hear me and understand. Because isn’t that what makes it real?
Maybe while my experiences are not unique, my voice just might be.
I thought at first that, with Prose, I needed to write an expose. Something splashy. So I started with what had happened at that group therapy session. I wrote probably five hundred words, seemingly endless words, endless awkwardness and forced sentences. I didn’t have a flow and I knew that. I didn’t have the practice. I also didn’t know who I was talking to.
I felt like I was talking to a wall. No one commented on or liked my post. I didn’t go on Prose again for another two years.
Cue Covid-19.
At that time, I wasn’t sure what the Prose community was, or meant. And I simply didn’t have any content I thought was worth sharing, really: until I got a “like” on the April Challenge, I thought I was alone.
My first “like” was the first voice I heard back from the void.
My April Challenge entry wasn’t something I am particularly proud of now, but it was the start. Of Covid-19, and my relationship with myself as a writer.