The Quiet Bloodline
Epigraph (spoken slowly, like a breath drawn before descent):
“Not all inheritance is visible.”
“Some legacies are loud.
Others arrive in silence—
but they shape us just the same.”
“I come from silence.
But I do not leave in silence.”
I was born into stories
nobody told—
but I felt them anyway.
In the silence at dinner,
the tight jaw,
the way no one said I’m sorry
even when sorry begged to be spoken.
My grandmother lost things
she never named.
My mother learned
not to cry.
I learned
to keep my questions quiet.
This is how pain moves through blood—
not with screams,
but with restraint.
They passed it down
without knowing.
A look.
A rule.
A fear.
Some nights,
I wake with my hands clenched,
carrying a w eight
I never picked up.
Some wounds
are passed like heirlooms—
wrapped in cloth,
tucked in drawers,
never shown,
always there.
But I—
I am not just a vessel.
I am the turning point.
I name
what they would not.
I feel
what they could not.
I am the broken chain,
the unlearned silence,
the one who says—
it ends here.
A. In the Shadows We Carry
Buried in Ancestral Night
In the quiet space before the day begins,
shadows shift with memories, not mine.
Pain runs deep, blood remembers—
sorrow passed like a name no one says aloud.
It moves through me like dark water,
a current I never chose,
echoes of grief sewn into the dark
with hands long gone.
Their hurt is in my posture,
in the things I flinch from.
We carry them—
their silence, their weight—
even when we do not know the names.
They live in the bones,
etched in quiet.
A gift no one wanted,
a debt never owed.
Still, I carry it.
B. Inherited Burdens
Legacy of Sorrow
Beneath the skin, old wounds live on—
not visible, but felt
in the way, I move through the world.
This pain did not start with me.
It rose from generations
that never had the time
to fall apart.
They kept going,
so I could stand here now,
aching with everything they could not release.
Their unfinished grief
burns in my chest.
Their stories live in my silence.
This is not just mine—
this sadness, this weight—
but it is mine to face,
to hold,
and maybe,
to let go.
C. Echoing Pain
Tears of Time
There is grief blooming
even in beautiful places.
It does not care for timing.
It roots in the cracks.
I feel it sometimes—
not as my own,
but as something old,
handed down in gestures,
in the way, we avoid the word hurt.
Ancestral pain,
passed like recipes,
but made of absence,
no flavor.
Still, I see through the blur.
Still, I choose to look.
In naming the ache,
I break the cycle.
In feeling it fully,
I begin again.
Not just to survive,
but to remake
what they never had the chance to.