Netta
Donetta is a freelance writer with her poetry appearing in The Mystic Blue Review, Spillwords and Ink & Voices. She contributes articles on
Barely made it through
September, Autumn is
playing sad death songs.
Staring at my Thomas
Kincaid calendar, red
marker poised above.
I'm longing to scratch
angry lines across the
weekdays, tear out four
weekends, removing it
from my teary blurred
vision, pretend nothing
black ever touched us.
Weary from tampering
down painful screams
fighting to come out, I
hurtfully bury deeper.
Years running together
until I'm wearing stress
rough, tattered, sickly.
Time's a cruel, cryptic
companion, stretching
hours, dragging seconds,
always he's demanding
attention from a broken
person, grieving cannot
interfere nor read hands
moving slowly around a
ticking clock, heavily it
sits upon my chest, I've
somehow forgotten how
I'm supposed to breathe.
My mouth gapes open
from disbelief but nothing
comes out other than a
silence that's deafening.
October, halfway finished,
my mind cannot process
this winter, cold, gloomy
suffocating already, I've
barely made it through
September, in the distant
I can hear the death songs.