Under my mother’s watchful, distant stare,
Lingered years of silence, too heavy to bear.
A house full of absence, thick and loud—
Her love like smoke, never allowed.
Through hallways lined with quiet hurt,
I searched for warmth in the coldest dirt.
Her leaving was not with doors or feet,
But in the way our eyes would never meet.
In that hollow, I learned to breathe,
Found my own rhythm, teeth beneath grief.
What broke me also made me stay—
Alive in spite, not swept away.
These scars do not scream, but they remain,
A quiet map etched deep with pain.
Still, I walk forward, day by day,
Growing in strength, finding my way.
Because even where no love was shown,
A different strength was somehow grown.
The will to rise, to stand, to mend—
To seek out something real again.
I tell this now in an honest thread,
A story spun from tears I shed.
My mother’s hand, though it pulled apart,
Taught me to stitch a sturdier heart.
In the space where healing dares to start,
I found voices that echo my heart.
We speak, we break, we learn to stand—
Side by side, hand in hand.
This poem is not for pity or praise—
But proof I lived through those days.
Though the pain was planted in my chest,
I have made room for hope to rest.
She gave me silence, and I made a song.
Despite all, I still belong.