Louder than Ever Before
I was three years old,
When I wanted my sister's toy fire truck.
It sat on her floor,
I picked it up,
Took it as mine.
It was so easy.
Boy, was I in luck.
Dad inquired,
And I lied.
Due to wandering eyes,
He learned the truth,
And his rebuke was
Louder than ever before.
I was nine years old,
When I played my first soccer game.
I was too timid to score,
Not fast enough for midfield.
I played defense,
My Dad's favorite.
Constantly distracted,
I often made mistakes.
Dad shouted instruction
And encouragement
Louder than ever before.
I was twelve years old,
When my baby brother died.
Old enough to feel,
Too young to understand
Just how to move on.
Those tickle fights
And funny noises
He and Dad shared
Would never happen again.
But, that's when I saw
Dad break down and bawl
Louder than ever before.
I was eighteen years old,
When I graduated high school.
I'd forgotten to care,
More times than I could count.
I'd lost more chances,
Than I can ever make up.
Dad made sure I knew the difference,
Between the school's best,
And mine.
At the end, and still too short,
I ran to him, gave him a hug.
That's when I heard his heart beating
Louder than ever before.
I was not ready,
When Dad intervened,
Showed my son,
what a real hero looks like.
He laid still on a hospital bed,
In the place of an endangered child.
It hurt to know that
Dad fought for every breath.
His weak hand waved me over,
Pulled my wrist closer.
He whispered in my ear.
"I love you,"
Louder than ever before.
I am Dead
I am dead.
But please, don't
Try to measure, the
Life, you think I must
Have had. Because I
Was born this way.
You see:
My lungs don't know what it's like,
To inflate with the air of life.
My flesh and bones can only create
An illusion: me bearing weight.
And, my heart--my heart is stone.
I cry, I hug, I ache,
But know not a sliver of feeling,
Jealousy, love, hate.
I feel nothing--nothing real.
Do you know?
What it's like. To own a living life?
I've heard there's a way
To come alive for the first time,
To rip out this rock heart,
And replace depravities hole
With something … oh, something,
So divinely set apart.
All I know:
Is that I cannot
make my own heart beat.
But, I do feel desperation,
And I so desperately
Want to be alive.
I am an Addict
I am an addict.
But, I've always thought
Of being sober.
I'm aware of what the doses
Do to me. They put this image
in my mind, of a throne.
On this throne, I sit.
And when I'm sitting, everyone
Is unworthy, unworthy
of being better.
Taking the drug, morphs the world I see.
The strength of the world,
Is small,
Compared to me.
The value of all the people
Is less,
Than what I
Must be worth.
In the world,
Apart from me,
There is no beauty.
The symptoms are few,
But it cripples my tongue,
From uttering words,
That could help,
Make anyone be any better.
Because, I'm on my throne.
And, I like my throne. So,
why would I want
To give up my drug.
I am an Anchor
I am an anchor.
Intentionally built to sink,
To ground someone else
While they float in the sky.
Chained to the clouds,
I fight,
Against the tides, against
The wind.
The tugging means
That I am alive.
The fighting provides
Me with breath.
What if the chain breaks,
I fear.
I can't lift myself,
I know.
Worry is real,
But fighting is life.
I Am the Monster Under the Bed
I am the monster under this little girl's bed.
She crawls into bed each night,
prays a little prayer,
and wishes the light to the bathroom could always stay lit
even if she never had to go.
She doesn't know why I'm here.
It's the dreams. I do what I can to stop the dreams.
I try to stop the pain the nightmares cause.
She should never have to feel the hurt that she does in her sleep.
My growl is fierce, and I fight every chance I get.
Space is small, and my reach is just short.
Some dreams, I can't stop.
That little girl doesn't understand what I try to do.
Some nights she whispers,
"Hey Monster, can you turn on the light? I have to go potty."
Other nights, she screams at me,
"I hate you. Stop helping."
She'll kick and slap.
"Go away," she yells, "I want to be alone."
Monsters can cry too.
But you see, I love her too much to let her face those dreams alone.