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Childhood
I feel my body sink into the cushion
 Of the seat that holds me tight,
 And it’s comforting 
 The way the pillowy simplicity
 Fills every dent and curve 
 like I am some delicate object
 Threatening to throw myself 
 On the concrete
 And break myself into a million pieces.
 You tell me to be happy,
 That they’re taking good care
 Of the house that taught me
 How to sew myself back together 
 But I cant seem to help but notice
 The yellow isn’t quite so sunny
 Anymore.
 I want to hate them,
 I desperately want to let my brain destroy them
 For destroying me,
 But I can’t. 
 I can’t let the fact that 
 They let the weeds consume
 My mother’s rose garden 
 Rip me into pieces
 Like they are threatening to.
 The raindrops pull and gather
 with eachother like a choir of
 teardrops 
 on my window
 and I can't help but wish
 I still owned what was
 so rightfully mine.
 Life has taught me that 
 It's easier to get beat up and broken
 than to stay strong--
 but I wanr to steal my dark days away
 and hold on to them in a treasure chest,
 so I can go back to the darkness
 and relive those storms once more.
 I can still see the crack in the siding,
 where I had kicked my first soccer ball
 hoping to not be a disappointment.
 If only I could see how disappointing I'd become
 maybe I never would have tried so hard
 to make him proud.
 He never was, though.
 The paintings I painted, 
 the music I made,
 everything I had thought was beautiful
 turned out to be one big disappointment.
 The window to my old room is naked,
 naked like a tree in the winter,
 and it's frosted over like they were keeping something.
 Maybe they thought 
 keeping me away would
 make things better
 but the deep, depressing longing
 I have 
 to lay in the clouds of grass again
 overrides
 every temptation I have to leave.
 To run away from
 the house that taught me 
 everything WOULDN'T be okay,
 and that it was perfectly
 okay
 to not be okay.
 Every lesson I've learned
 through sadness
 can be traced back to that house,
 and it strangely makes me
 happy.
 Happy to know 
 that broken hearts can be mended
 just like the brokenness of that house.
 With some love,
 lots of love,
 a little attention,
 a little affection,
 it would be good as new-- 
 just like me. 
 With love and attention,
 and affection and recognition,
 and hands to guide me
 in the right direction,
 one day,
 some day,
 I'll be new.
 But new doesn’t always mean better,
 because my new place
 doesn’t even have 
 the right to be called a home--
 because it doesn’t mend the brokenness,
 with love and comfort
 like the old one did.
 Maybe, for once in my life,
 old was
 new
 instead.

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