Pete Ak
12-27-2012, 09:29 AM
Five years old, suddenly alone; in a Childrens’ Home.
He was cared for, as one of many
which crushed his identity
and meant a little boy grew, without self-value.
Eight years later and his mind is full
of self-loathing imaginings, intertwined like bramble.
Dispiriting ideas, as tangled as the hair on his head,
tousled and twisted around barbed-wire thread.
On his sixteenth birthday
one of the makeshift mothers gave him a diary.
A suitable chalice for teenage angst.
He wrote,
“Once, my mind flashed with instantaneous reflections of intersecting rainbows and raindrops.“
A year later, his suicide note read,
“My thoughts feel like thorns, shredding my brain cells into chaos.”
“Right now, I wish I was anyone else and anywhere else other than me, here.”
Survival… treatment and a skin deep recovery.
He was thirty when we met and I learned to respect
the only authentic part of him – his vulnerability.
A lady, who called herself a therapist,
had been clipping and hacking at the metaphoric mess
of brier and thistle. To no avail.
The harder she’d flailed the thicker
his weed-like thoughts had conspired
like refuge-seeking vagabonds.
He reckons the times we walked on Winter beaches,
I taught him trust, and he showed me skimming stones,
and this encouraged him to venture further into refuge
than he would ever have dared, alone.
Yet he then endured his
‘annus excellentium et humilium’.
Tired of stalking redemption,
in a desperate impulse to cure himself (or self-harm?)
He grabbed the strongest bramble,
(representing self-esteem) and
its longest, sharpest prick,
(“invisible, worthless little fuk”)
impaled his palm.
That strongest bough was thick
from a lifetime of self immolation,
yet with skewered hand he drew it hard
from his head via his ear. At least,
”that’s how it felt,” he said.
He pulled the shambles.
Each tearing spike, each razor shard,
(that’s memories and insights),
tore the membranes of his mind apart.
Each revelation, each confessional tear
Brought him lacerating relief.
Now, my man has uncovered all those
self-betraying avowals.
And, though they judge him harshly,
he keeps them close and
confronts them, dauntless -
So he need not endure them again.
He was cared for, as one of many
which crushed his identity
and meant a little boy grew, without self-value.
Eight years later and his mind is full
of self-loathing imaginings, intertwined like bramble.
Dispiriting ideas, as tangled as the hair on his head,
tousled and twisted around barbed-wire thread.
On his sixteenth birthday
one of the makeshift mothers gave him a diary.
A suitable chalice for teenage angst.
He wrote,
“Once, my mind flashed with instantaneous reflections of intersecting rainbows and raindrops.“
A year later, his suicide note read,
“My thoughts feel like thorns, shredding my brain cells into chaos.”
“Right now, I wish I was anyone else and anywhere else other than me, here.”
Survival… treatment and a skin deep recovery.
He was thirty when we met and I learned to respect
the only authentic part of him – his vulnerability.
A lady, who called herself a therapist,
had been clipping and hacking at the metaphoric mess
of brier and thistle. To no avail.
The harder she’d flailed the thicker
his weed-like thoughts had conspired
like refuge-seeking vagabonds.
He reckons the times we walked on Winter beaches,
I taught him trust, and he showed me skimming stones,
and this encouraged him to venture further into refuge
than he would ever have dared, alone.
Yet he then endured his
‘annus excellentium et humilium’.
Tired of stalking redemption,
in a desperate impulse to cure himself (or self-harm?)
He grabbed the strongest bramble,
(representing self-esteem) and
its longest, sharpest prick,
(“invisible, worthless little fuk”)
impaled his palm.
That strongest bough was thick
from a lifetime of self immolation,
yet with skewered hand he drew it hard
from his head via his ear. At least,
”that’s how it felt,” he said.
He pulled the shambles.
Each tearing spike, each razor shard,
(that’s memories and insights),
tore the membranes of his mind apart.
Each revelation, each confessional tear
Brought him lacerating relief.
Now, my man has uncovered all those
self-betraying avowals.
And, though they judge him harshly,
he keeps them close and
confronts them, dauntless -
So he need not endure them again.