because the tyrant lived there.
Like a bad head louse
it couldn’t let go
of the power
pulsing through me.
The power of anger,
reckless abandon,
and love.
My stomach might be the star
at the center of my solar system body,
but even large planets and hearts pull stars to their gravity
a little.
Like, child, I cry rivers from my anger
and bathe whole towns with the tears–
I bend this frame after the purpose
that my heart wants,
and if that’s gravity,
give this drumbeat muscle all of it,
give this heart
the power to make
the people depend on me for water,
make the people depend on the fuel of my fire,
keep them weeping at my romantic professions,
my heartache,
my triumphs in love.
When my heart knows what she craves,
I am the mightiest thing to soar this galaxy;
she wraps all the little moons around her finger
and laughs
while the lonely worlds come begging for them back.
When she is happy,
nothing can touch me;
no hunger
no breathless hitch
no throat deserted
by the flood squeezing down my face
can scathe us.
So my jealous sun-stomach rebelled
against her,
my loathing lungs joined forces
and blew a meteor Jupiter’s way,
blew a couple double-agent moons
to wreak havoc on the giddy deity of the sky.
They couldn’t stand this heart’s control of the solar system–
her bloody grip
and lightning need
were burning me
at the stake.
The Great Heartbreak,
historians would call it
if they saw my insides–
a great moon
falls through the pool
of the red atmosphere,
crashes,
splits it asunder.
A crater
liquifies solid land,
this collision spits out
continental crusts
and chunks of the core
through the equator’s storms,
unwilling offerings to the void’s décor.
Then
a great meteor
follows the traitor moon,
trailed by
a colony of comets.
They take another chunk, another ripple,
another mountain, more stone,
until even clouds wisp away
and only asteroids remain.
Ding, dong,
The tyrant is dead,
oh so dead,
smashed up and fled, a crumb trail scattered in its orbit like bread–
but no survivors remain to follow it back whole.
The tyrant is dead,
the sun tried to take its place,
but had to feed the hungry children again,
the lungs of Neptune tried to fill the vacancy
but had to keep up with breathing instead.
The power lay scattered,
still broken and cold,
and in the emptiness I knew peace,
stillness, a cease;
here, I keep nothing but boulders beating
where my greedy heart used to be.
***

Image by ZCH on Pexels.com
I absolutely loved the poem. Sometimes we’re our own biggest problem and sometimes we’re at war with ourselves. Life is not easy but we have to keep trying our best to grow and be better.
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Exactly! The perspective of this poem doesn’t exactly take the healthiest route to dealing with the internal war, but yes, if we try and work on not being our own enemy, I definitely believe we can improve 😊
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Yeah, it think the poem works well because we don’t always deal with things in a healthy way especially internal conflict. But we just have to keep trying 😊
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