I do not know how to go on
With you,
And I do not know how to go on
Without you.
This is our liminal space, our
Handcarved pocket of eternity.
Always here and always leaving and maybe,
in a hundred years or a few seconds,
we will find our way out of this trap.
.
—y.c.
Bastard,
they called you
As if the lack of father is a curse
(It is not)
Murderer,
they called you
As if the ones you killed deserved any less
(They did not)
Darling,
she called you
As if her gentle words would be enough to save you
(They were not)
Cursed,
you call yourself
What do they know,
of broken souls and
breaking hearts
mothered by a broken promise and
sired from a broken vow
(Nothing. They know nothing.)
— y.c.
Who decides what is right and what is wrong? Is it us— our hearts, our beliefs? Is it society— feeding us lies and truth in equal measure our whole lives? Or is it nature— the ever-present, slow-changing world we grow to love? Besides, who are we to choose? Right doesn’t come as pure white. Wrong doesn’t appear as stark black. Shades of grey dominate our world, and everyone is trying to decide which shades are worse than others. Our whole lives are founded on what we believe in our hearts. In that way, no one is a villain. Everyone is only trying to make their way in a world where good and evil are undefinable.
So don’t be so quick to judge. Battles are rarely fought in plain sight of others; rather, they occur in our hearts and souls and we wear our scars like trophies. Time and time again, we fight for the good in us. We fight to meet our own goals, to conquer our own worlds and fears and insecurities. Because demons will always lose to angels, if you put your mind to it. After all, without angels, demons would exist. And without demons, angels would have no meaning.
A friend of mine wants flowers for her room, she says.
She wants to make it beautiful and vibrant and fresh, but
Blossoms fade and petals mold, she says,
Clutching her falsified flowers,
Petals carefully crafted—
A forgery,
hundreds of days in the making in factories where they make
hundreds of petals that never die.
Immortality is the prize, beauty a side effect, and yet
How many of us choose both as a goal?
-
—Immortality comes with plastic petals (y.c.)
Dreamers with empty hearts and frozen hands,
you come running
crying “love”
when it’s
Convenient
when you’re tired of carrying the weight of the
world (responsibility)
and I let you in
the foolish, gullible villager falling
Always
for your tricks
but one day,
Your cries will no longer sound genuine and
that,
my love,
is the day you’ll perish
— a warning (y.c.)
I don’t love you anymore.
-
I don’t love you anymore,
But
-
There are days I wake up and I think I feel your arms around me
And my lungs
Ache like I haven’t taken in enough air.
-
There are days where I turn
with your name on my lips
And there is nothing there, only empty air,
Dust motes and smoke.
-
I don’t love you anymore,
but
-
It’s been so long since I was alone,
I’d forgotten the way loneliness tastes like regret
when you’ve drunk enough of it.
-
—y.c.
Home is teddy bears
exuberant cheers
child’s laughter
parents’ pride
Home is quiet 2 A.M. conversations
thoughts too loud for music
words too raw to speak
pen ink fresh on a page
Home is tea steeping
cookies baking
alarms beeping
clocks ticking
Funny how so much of
Home
is what I made from
Everything
you never gave me
— Yushan C.
Hey y’all!
I’m absolutely terrible at posting things regularly, so a massive thank you to everyone who’s following me and bearing with my non-existent planning skills. I’ll try to post one a month at least from now on, but no promises cuz uni is crazy like that.
I’ve gotten published in a few places since I last posted, and I’ll link them below! It’s super exciting, and I hope you enjoy the poems.
amaranthine
Indigo
the ghosts in my home still haunt me
(there are also poems in InkMovement’s Edmonton Youth Anthology, Vol I, but they only print in paper so I can’t put the link here)
Writing excerpts and poetry on nostalgia, regret, identity, optimism—just about everything, really.Main blog: aceass1n
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