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Sawyer Nov 2017
I think too much.
I care too deeply.
I text too often.
I laugh too hard,
For fear of them having to fret
As much I do.
Such is the nature of a worrier.
It's hard to be an optimist all the time.
Sawyer Oct 2017
Sometimes it feels like the world is doing its best to crush me.
Like it’s trying to squeeze the tears out of my eyes,
Or take away all the air from around me and leave me alone to suffocate.

Sometimes it feels like everyone’s problems are suddenly mine.
Like it’s up to me to fix everything,
And placing one foot wrong could make everything fall apart.

Whenever I feel like the world’s gone out of it’s way to shove me over the edge of a cliff
Just to see how well I can swim, I go to you.
You bring me up for air, my life preserver.

Thank you.

Sometimes I want to scream
The days have sharpened their claws only to rip at my heart,
And when they’re done, they leave it alone to bleed

Some days I feel like I ruin everything I touch
And people laugh because they think it’s funny,
So I laugh along with them, because what else am I supposed to do?

Whenever I feel like I’m about to break,
You step in with a hug and a roll of tape,
To fix me where I’m cracking.

Thank you.

You are the cast that’s wrapped itself around my life,
Holding me tightly so that I can start to heal.

You are the message,
The joke,
The lilting laughter that lifts me up and up,
Into the clouds
And away from the Earth.

We left my lead shoes stuck in the mud.
Good.
They were only making me heavier.
But you let me float.


And so we fly away
Hand in hand
Our heads in the clouds
Because that’s where we belong.

Thank you.
This poem means something different to me now than it did when I first wrote it. I guess it belongs to more people now. And I love all of them so much. <3
Sawyer Oct 2017
Like specks of broken ice
Dancing ‘cross the sky-
Soft as the music
of a flute floating by-
As lovely as jewels
Hung up in pride,
Stars hypnotize
With sparkling eyes.
Like the moon in the water,
you can’t look away
Sleep soundly at night,
stars are gone by your wake.
As curious as a sly fox,
who always seems to slip away,
stars are mysteries,
Best left unsolved, anyway
The first poem I ever wrote.
Blame my sixth-grade teacher for everything! :D
Sawyer Sep 2017
In first grade,
Gay was just a word.
We didn’t know what it meant.
We just knew that boys and girls liked each other.
And that was fine with me,
Because as far as I knew, that was all I was.

In second grade,
There was a boy,
Who said he had two mothers.
I didn’t understand why,
But through all the scenarios I pondered
It never crossed my mind that maybe
They loved each other.

In third grade,
Gay was weird, unheard of.
My classmates said it was wrong.
I would get upset, and when I asked them why,
Why it was wrong to love the way you were born to,
They answered with cop-outs and stammers.
It made me feel satisfied.

In fifth grade,
Gay was… fine…  
but still, nobody really understood.
Boys still liked girls,
And girls still liked boys,
Just like it had been since grade one.

The questions started
In sixth grade,
When I met a girl, who quickly became my best friend.
She was beautiful.
I would imagine her kissing me,
Smiling at me, holding my hand,
And I liked it.
‘But,’ I would ask myself, ‘I am still straight, aren’t I?”

Because that’s what I’d been my whole life.
I'd liked boys.


At the time,
These feelings didn’t bring me shame or fear,
But instead, questions and opportunity,
It was new thing about myself to explore,
And I was excited!

But.

Instead of a new era of excitement,
And exploration,
I got a kick in the stomach from an antagonizer named Reality.

I told two people that I’d liked a girl.
One friend I trusted, and one classmate I hardly knew.
That classmate told two more people,
and one of them stopped me in the classroom on our way back from lunch, saying,
“Is it true? That you’re…”
She didn't finish, but I knew what she had meant to say.
I told her yes.
She made a disgusted face and walked away.

That day I went home crying.
For the rest of the year,
That girl’s younger brother would stop me on my way to the buses every day and tell me,
“People are saying that you’re a lesbian.”
And at the time, it hurt.
Because in sixth grade, gay was an insult.

In seventh grade, I didn't talk about my sexuality.
The feelings for my friend had faded,
And I could be straight again.
I swooned over boys with all the other girls,
Thinking that I'd just gone through a phase.

That summer,
I moved away.
Away from everything and everyone I'd ever known.
Waves of anxiety beat away whatever flimsy dam I'd built between me and my sexuality
And I was terrified.
The concept of being anything other than straight was crazy,
But at the same time,
I couldn't dismiss the feelings as a phase anymore.

I was confused.
I wanted an answer, so I gave myself false labels and told myself to live with it.
‘This is what you are. Just don't think about it.
Don't think about it, and maybe you'll be able to forget.’
I was never able to forget.

At that point, it wasn’t even the feelings that were the problem anymore.
It was the not knowing.
I wanted something to call myself
I needed a label.
But none of them fit me quite right.

In eighth grade,
The anxious waves calmed to simple tides.
I still had no label,
I still hadn't fallen for a girl since my best friend,
And I never, ever talked about it to anyone else,
But I had learned to control my thoughts a bit more.

One day, I'm talking online.
A girl posts on the chat,
Saying something about being gay.
I join the conversation eagerly.

Tentative to give a label to myself,
I don’t say outright who I am
Because I felt I would be lying no matter
What I said.

And in our DMs I threw out identities
That almost applied to me
But the great thing about digital faces
Is that their eyes don’t scathe.

And through our conversations
She taught me things that I’d never learned
Living in a monochromatic world,
Because she was the only one who was able to understand.

Now, I’d lived my whole life being told,
‘You are never alone,’
But I was never able to believe it.
Until this girl brought consolation to my isolation
And showed me that I wasn’t alone.
That there are so many others who understand.

Who understand what it feels like to question yourself,
To look at everything you’ve ever been told and think, “but that isn't me.”
People who understand what it's like to be confused
And scared,
Because the mold that forms the world
Wasn’t made for us.
They understand what it’s like
To live your life thinking that your shape is wrong.
“I should fit somewhere. Why can’t I fit?”

But she also taught me to be unapologetically myself
How to need no label but the one saying “me.”
How to take a knife,
And instead of using it to carve yourself into a different shape,
Use it to make a mold
That you can lay in comfortably.

And now I know.

I know that straight was never what I was supposed to be,
It’s just what I had seen my whole life

I’m not a cow that needs a tag punched through my ear, just because others want an explanation of who I am

There's no right way to be queer,
And right now, I'm doing great!

Gay is not an insult - now, if anything, I'll take it as a compliment!

I am not strange.
I am not abnormal.
I am not broken.

And I can finally love the way I was born to.
I'm bi.

It took me so long to be able to say those two tiny words.
Sawyer Jul 2017
I can't eat Ramen.
Which *****, cuz I love Ramen!
The broth is so good!


Curley fries are great.
They're better than normal fries.
Nobody knows why.


DVD's aren't dead.
I like the commentary.
That's why I buy them.


Thesauruses help,
But is using them cheating?
I will never know.


Okay, I'm done now.
Seriously, you can go.
They're just dumb haikus!
This is what the brain of a poet looks like. We all think in Haiku. X3
Sawyer Jun 2017
I’ve been told
My dreams are unachievable.
Why stretch
For a place
You don’t know you can reach?
Why try
For something you know is impossible?
Well,
Why not stretch
For a place
You might be able to reach
Why not try
Something no one’s ever tried before
Why not dream
If you believe
Your dream can come true.
Ahhhh, this topic is so cliche. But I don't care! I'm cliche and I'm proud!!
Sawyer Jun 2017
This morning I looked out my window
And saw a biker biking by
I thought to myself, “Where’s she going?
When is she getting there? And why?”

Maybe she’s riding her bike to school,
She did look very young.
17, 18, 19 even,
But not quite 21.

Maybe she’s riding her bike to work,
Because she doesn’t have a car.
It would be easier to bike
If her work is very far.

Maybe the ******* the bike is riding
All the way back home
It’s funny to think that the ******* the bike
Won’t know about her poem.
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