+
poems-and-words:
“Book of the day: The Last Mile by David Baldacci
Get the FREE Kindle Reading App
”
+
"sometimes the poem tends to repeat itself
the subject is screaming and sad
and the hours do not belong or allow"
June Jordan, from “From an Uprooted Condition,” Directed By Desire: The Collected Poems of June Jordan
(via lifeinpoetry)
+
+
"I want to know what to do
with the dead things we carry."
Aracelis Girmay (via quotemadness)
+
"

let me tell you something:

no one is going to look at you, broken and shattered
and think -
damn, you are beautiful.

no one is going to come pick up your broken pieces off the floor and
assemble them into a beautiful whole.

hell,
you won’t even look at yourself and think -
I made broken look beautiful.

you know why?

because all those writers lied to you.

yes,
all those with their poems of scraped knuckles and
blood dripping down chins,
pomegranate songs and loves that ripped through you like
hurricanes.

liars.

so you and i,
we are going to make a plan.

you are not going to romanticize days when your brain tells you to smash that mirror,
you are not going to romanticize the lover who doesn’t understand you
but still writes about you.

here is what you are going to romanticize instead:

you are going to romanticize the first day of spring,
its gentle hands all over your body,
lifting you up until you are as light as a feather.

you are going to romanticize the tea and honey kind of love,
no hurricanes,
but sunshine that builds you up from within,
that helps you make it through the worst days.

you are going to romanticize gentle hands of a friend
in yours,
telling you that it is going to be okay.

because it is.

and don’t trust poets,
we’re no good,
we love pretending that our jagged edges tantamount to a beautiful disaster, but in reality -
there ain’t nothing beautiful about shaky hands holding a cigarette and
empty eyes staring at the cracks in the walls.

you know what is beautiful, instead?

the days when you can look at yourself in the mirror and smile,
scars and all.

music that makes your soul flow like a river,
books that offer comfort,
families flocking together like overgrown birds to keep you safe and warm,
friends that give you strength when you can find none,
lovers who make you laugh through tears.

baby,
from now on
you are going to romanticize healing;

honey dripping down your fingertips,
August nights that stick to your skin,
the day you find your purpose,
long car rides and singing so loud that no one can shut you up now.

bad news:
no one is coming to save you.

good news:
you can save yourself.

"
Lana Rafaela (via wnq-writers)
+
"I find the best way to love someone is not to change them, but instead, to help them reveal the greatest version of himself."
Steve Maraboli (via wnq-anonymous)
+
outcrying:
“ “is there somebody who can watch you?
” ”
+
+
"Maybe tomorrow
falling in love with someone 
will not be a dream."
Maxwell Diawuoh, Haiku #2 (264/366)
+
"I didn’t know what to call it, what was happening between us, but I liked it. It felt silly and fragile and good."
Ransom Riggs, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children
(via thelovejournals)