After the Loud
I keep waiting for noise.
My ears ring with its absence,
like phantom limb pain
for a sound that's gone.
The neighbor's wind chimes
still make me flinch.
But there's only breeze now,
no distant thunder of shells.
My tea grows cold
while I watch clouds.
They're just clouds now,
not signals or signs.
Sparrows have returned
to nest in broken eaves.
Strange how ordinary songs
fill spaces bombs left behind.
My hands remember
the weight of a rifle
but hold garden tools instead.
The dirt accepts them both.
The kids next door play war.
I want to tell them
they're doing it wrong—
too much laughing, too much joy.
But their peace is real,
not this quiet I wear
like borrowed clothes,
still stiff with tags.
At night I count heartbeats,
not casualties.
The numbers mean nothing now.
Nothing needs counting.
Sometimes I catch myself
planning escape routes
through my own garden.
Old habits die harder than people.
The silence stretches,
thick as armor.
I'm still learning
how to laugh again.