kintsugi.
I will never forget the day
I first noticed,
The jagged white lines,
Etched unto the surfaces of your skin.
I was young,
Still in primary school, perhaps…
And in my youthful innocence I asked,
What were they? How did you get them?
And you spun me a story of how you were working in a building,
Whilst leaning upon a glass frame, your arms fell through and with it so did you,
And the shards tore the tissue in your arms
And left you with those permanent scars..
I noticed the glimmer in your eye as you spoke -
The forming of a tear,
Reflecting the bronze glow of the sun as it peered through your windowsill,
Casting rays of gold upon the blank walls and faces..
I will never forget
The way those scars looked through the eyes of a younger self -
The way they danced, like the scales of a koi fish,
Twirling amidst a sea of light,
Silver, shimmering rays,
Like slug trails -
Reminiscent of "kintsugi",
The Japanese art of repairing that which is broken,
With a golden glue,
As to admire the fragile nature
Of things, so beautiful.
Yours were sown silver,
Delicate white threads that spoke of a time you were hurting,
And in pain,
But survived.
They are signs of your victory,
Trails of the trials put through.
I could see that,
I can feel that.
Those silver hues,
You survived.
They say every cloud has a silver lining, and
Yours were sewn into skin.