Poignantly Short Poems

Photo by Andreas Haslinger

I don’t know how to be sorry

For something I didn’t do

But I do know how to hurt

Because you think I did.


When the dust eventually settles

And you can look me in the face

I will still want to ask you

Aren’t we better than this?


There’s always hope for repair

But when someone asks for their stuff back

The broken pieces start heading for the trash.


I will never understand

Why the countless hours

We spent together

Were not enough witness

To the kind of person I am.


You have become a stranger

And what’s harder to digest

Is the feeling that you always were.


Some day I’d like

For people to seek me out

To sit at my feet and listen

As I tell the story of how I got here

Not because what I will say

Is revolutionary or profound

But because I, just like you,

Have a deep desire to be heard.


Imagine

Being the kind of man who says

To the woman who has endured

His lies, gaslighting, silence and

Punishing cruelty

“You can’t call me an abuser.”

Yes, sir, I can.

And I did.

And I will do it again.


I am not the kind of woman

Who is grateful for crumbs

When I see everyone else 

Enjoying a chunk of the loaf

So when I smack your puny olive branch

Right out of your outstretched hand

Ask yourself 

Why

You thought I should be satisfied 

With your inadequate offering.


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