Hope and Trauma; A Cycle

Growing up was a mess, so I made a vow to my unborn children:

You will have the best of me.
The love my parents couldn't give, I promised to pour out in floods.

I clawed through the ache of a childhood starved of warmth,
clinging to the hope that I could build something better.

Academics - checked.
Job - secured.
Husband - found.

But I married a man still bleeding from his own unhealed wounds.
Two broken people don’t make a whole. They just bleed on each other.

So even before I could hold my pristine child,
the furnace of marital strife had already scorched the softness in me.
I became the version of my mother I swore I’d never be.
And my father? His ghost lives in me too;
passive aggression leaking out like stench from an open sewer.

I thought I was free. I thought I’d left lies behind.
But my own faults stacked up like cargo,
and suddenly, I was always on the defensive.

Then came the comet's flash;
that bright, burning promise of the mother I’d be.
But it died before it ever touched the ground.

Now I see it in her eyes:
the flinch when my voice rises,
the quiet defeat when her father won’t listen.
And Lord, the things she’s seen;
flying fists, flying words, flying plates.
She might grow up to be a wrestler,
just to make sense of the battles she was born into.

She’s a girl, my child.
Maybe one day she’ll sit where I sit,
holding the same dream I held:
to break the cycle, to get it right.

But here I am, asking the same tired question:
Why is it so hard to get it right?



Must life always be a seesaw;
easy one moment, hell the next?

Maybe the planet doesn’t want peace.
Maybe that’s why it loads us, daily,
with more weight than we can carry.

Comments

  1. This is so deep, yet realistically relatable ✨👍🏾

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for taking your time to read this.

      May we be healed.

      Delete

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