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Nik Apr 2021
8 billion people in the world—
and here i am drowning in an infinity pool of self-pity.
i tell myself one day i will stop.
swim back towards the edge, gasping for breath, a new life to transform into.
and here i am drowning in an infinity pool of self pity.
The world is too heavy on my shoulders
a Apr 2021
He comes home…
We never know exactly when.
I used to think he was cheating on my mother.

Maybe he always was.
But the liquor stole him first.
It held him tighter than we ever could.
He felt safer there,
had more fun with the bottle.
With every beer that slid down his throat,
he was more and more at home.
He loved us—
but the beer loved him more.
It pulled him under,
blurred his vision,
made him forget.

When he’d stumble in during the daylight,
his body swayed like a boat on rough waters.
I never appreciated enough
that he made it home at all in that condition.
His words would slur,
each end of a word colliding
with the beginning of the next.
Sometimes, he’d get so lost in thought,
so tangled in his own mind,
that he’d forget what we were even talking about.

My mother was always mad.
I used to be mad too—
and never knew why.
Until one day,
I gave in.
Gave him my forgiveness,
the one he never asked for.

You can’t teach an old dog new tricks…

I tried to support him,
but it’s so hard.
My mom is so tired—
just wanting a husband to come home to,
not a ghost of the man she married.
Someone to help around the house,
to string together a single clear thought,
to spend more time here than at the bar.

It breaks my heart.
I don’t know who to support.
I love them both.
W
h
y
is it so hard to be the daughter of a drunk?

There was no violence, no bruises,
just the fogginess of his absence,
just the late-night entrances
and the screams of my parents.
I used to wish they’d get divorced
just so the fighting would stop.

Sometimes, he wasn’t around at all.
But I have the good memories too.
He truly did love me.

It’s an addiction, you know?
Maybe if he had the power,
the knowledge,
the tools,
he would have chosen us
instead of the liquor.

He is my father,
and I love him nonetheless.
One of the coolest guys I know.
A real respectable man—
a true OG from the outfields of Humboldt Park.

A man who never got the healing he needed.
A man trapped in addiction,
drowning out the echoes of his past.
A man whose baby daughter chose her mother’s side,
who had to face the weight of two women’s anger.
Who could he turn to,
other than the bottle—
the one thing that never judged him?

A man repeating the steps of his father,
walking the only path he knew.
A man who tried his best,
who fought the fight,
but sometimes the fight was too strong.

A man who never learned therapy was an option.
A man who feared his own tears,
who thought vulnerability was weakness.
A man who drank to forget,
who drank to silence the noise.

And I forgive him.
I always will.

This is what it means
to be the daughter of a drunk.
Pink fluffy apples
Green juicy flamingos (hiccup)

     Black sour marmalade
(hiccup)

              Orange lumpy liquorice

Purple tangy mushroom

              White rich yoghurt

  (hiccup)

               (hiccup)
                            
                            (hiccup)

What did you put in my drink?
©️ 2021 Joshua Reece Wylie. All rights reserved.
The affects of alcohol on the human tongue. Lighthearted poem. The colour and adjective used to describe the noun have been swapped with the line beneath to imply the feelings of a muddled brain when drunk.
Have another drink,
Why don't you?
Take another sip?
The bartender's watching us closely but
If I give him a hearty enough tip
He'll leave us be
And we can slip
Down to the train tracks
Like our slurred words.

We won't make love but we'll
Lay on the mercury speckled rails
Singing our heads off,
Drinking some more ail till
The horn blares and
The insides of our eyes pool with gaudy lights from
Heaven above

And we're rolled to bits,
Leaving nothing behind but a trail
Of blood and
The heavenly light of tails.
I wish I could have made it a little less shallow but it messed with the already poor rhythm
neth jones Feb 2021
Witnessed uprooting :                  
                              ritual
        ­                                                               in the piracy of night
bare                                          
your sinning          
                               skin-suit
unhuman-you                       
                                 your human right
time fled along      
                             ebrius     
                                                     when i witnessed
your trespass
                   your violation
                                                       ­       you
                                                             uprooting the root
in the rivalry
                             of the night



up
upon the morning                                                          ­                           
                         you raise your muzzle blighted
turn your unprocessed head                                                    
        ­                           to retrieve social frequency                                           
                                                             tune in to the light
cold dew on a damaged lawn                                                
you collect your togs 
                                                        you­r paraphernalia                                     
                                                and pick your way tender:
        a rejoining propulsion                            
                  toward the convulsive city
to bed yourself                      
                 beneath its
quickening day
hungover
in selfish
wit
"At dawn the dews of Heaven dry away:
The seeds of Hell are sown again today."
- Issa
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