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unfiltered poetry; my published books are at inkwhisper.gumroad.com |
A happy poem? No. Not happening. The brain won’t lie. My fingers won’t fake it. Paper spits it back when it smells like pretending. It’s not about joy. Joy’s been chewed to pulp, sold a thousand times in pretty colors to people too scared to bleed for real. I can’t write praise with a gut that still tightens at night, remembering the hunger of a winter kitchen, empty jars, my mother’s hands counting shadows of bread. I can’t smile in a world where my name is a rented key, unlocked only when I’m a tool in someone else’s story. I hate them. Those grinning masks, kissing their own reflections, lying just enough to make their lives look whole. Painted misery is still a misery. I can’t write peace. Every day feels like war. No banners, no sides, just blood I hide under clean shirts, stains my shadow can’t forget. But if I forced it, if I wrote some fake dawn, it’d be a lie etched over the last honest shard of the man I still wake as. So I’ll write this instead: a world without shame is a world I’ll never see. I’ll claw through the dark with these cracked hands, until the dirt tastes like truth. |