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Lemons
I despise to lay and sit and think,
And pretend you don’t do the same.
Wishes for that pretend, for us, for a future,
Are they in vain? Is it pointless?
Do you sleep while standing, awake, with eyes closed,
Remembering my name, my touch, my laugh-
The way my perfume wafts around our skin.
I remember the notes of jasmine and musk- my favorite.
I stopped wearing it after you claimed to “prefer citrus.”
Was that her scent?
Even while we lay
In my hammock, under my lemon tree-
the blood rushing through your brain,
its path is directed not toward your heart,
nor to your hands interlaced through mine, but to those memories.
It speaks without talking- I see it in your eyes.
You tell me I hurt you, and I cry and beg.
I say the same and I’m left for crows, in the ground,
who peck at first the lemon rinds and then me.
And how am I supposed to leave
Remembering that time I cried,
and you whispered, I will always love you.
I used to think
always meant forever.
I know it doesn’t anymore. It doesn’t matter.
I threw out my jasmine perfume
at least I didn’t cry about that.
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This piece was inspired by the times I've felt second to someone not currently present while with a boy. It happens more often than not- and while it may be intentional or may not be, I've somehow always felt not good enough, or ended up crying for days. For me, writing down my feelings about it was always a good enough outlet to cover it up, smile, and pretend like nothing bothered me. I suppose you could say that this poem was an extension of that.