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poetic lemonade
Poetry is a key to the cage that I find myself to be
a lake of bright, blue dreams that quell my internal screams,
a bandaid to heal the hurt,
a broom to sweep away the dirt.
Poetry has been a friend,
a secret-keeper,
a mind-reader.
The sentences I string together
make me feel lighter than a feather.
Once those words unlock
the ball and chain
that captivates my brain,
I will be able to run up mountains,
build empires on my back,
and shake worlds with a profound impact.
My pen and notebook is my weapon
ready to step-in,
and stop the hate before it wins.
The words I create ease all that tension
those words, those words, oh, they make lemonade
out of lemons.
Did I mention that poetry is heaven?
That I’ve been writing poetry since I was seven?
Poetry is my escape.
It’s scotch tape to fix the hate.
Each page I write destroys that cold-hearted cage.
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It would be a lie to say that I have been writing for longer than I can remember. In fact, I remember the exact time that writing became an escape from the reality I felt stuck in: the divorce of my parents. Knitting pieces of letters together to create a word in order to create a sentence was like looking at a map- it was something I could rely on to help me navigate the mountains and valleys of my parent’s divorce. You could imagine what I wrote at just seven-years-old: tales about my best-friend and I exploring Neverland, my beloved stuffed-animal going on adventures to wondrous, whimsical worlds, and, of course, a reality where maybe, just maybe, my parents would glue their relationship back together to the way it was. But unlike Peter Pan, I had to grow up and allow the separation of my parents to settle into a new truth. Nonetheless, I continued to write merely because it was something that came easy to me; it was just like riding a bike- once I got going, it was hard to stop. As I got older, however, it was less about rainbows and unicorns and more about aspirations and fears, excitement and worry thus leading me to poetry.