Sometimes the scream rises in me
like an elevator with no brakes,
clattering up the spine,
lights flickering,
warning sirens warming my throat.
And I smile instead;
a too‑bright crescent
stitched onto my face
like a neon sign that forgot
what it was advertising.
The scream doesn’t vanish.
It just changes shape.
It becomes a chandelier
swinging wildly in an empty room,
glass trembling like it wants to jump.
It becomes a hallway
that stretches too far,
doors multiplying,
each one marked
not now, not now, not now.
It becomes a flock of birds
flying in the wrong direction,
wings beating against the weather
I pretend not to feel.
And the smile.
The smile holds;
a thin porcelain lid
on a pot that keeps boiling
even when the stove is off.
No one hears the scream
because it learned to speak
in the language of posture,
in the dialect of “I’m fine,”
in the accent of
“don’t worry about me.”
But it’s there,
pacing the perimeter,
testing the fences,
waiting for the day
I stop being the curator
of my own quiet chaos.
One response to “Smile Swallows Scream”
This feels very relatable. Thanks for putting it into words.
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