Tag: creative writing

  • Poem: Unease – 20/02/20

    Poem: Unease – 20/02/20

    The feeling I get when attending is one of great unease.
    I have not been here for long, but my heart pitter-patters,
    fluttering in the breeze.
     
    Why am I so nervous?
    I used to attend and be present many, many times,
    a feeling of stupendous awakening?
    I’m unsure of this,
    though I’ll be brave and allow myself to stay,
    I must try.
     
    What worries me are certain memories,
    but surely, they will not return,
    quietness is now overwhelming,
    there is only me at the helm,
    for I am the one steering the course of my ship,
    and if I’m tired, I’ll lend the movements to another,
    closer to me,
    perhaps a type of kin,
    then, he or she, will look after the helm,
    and allow me to soar, higher than the fear I feel within.
     
    There’s nothing to fear when I can hold myself near,
    hold myself together,
    or allow the movements of another.
    I can allow a being to help me be fixed piece by piece,
    because this feeling of unease will soon no longer be with me.
    
    © 2020 Lauren M. Hancock. All rights reserved.
    Photo by Eternal Happiness on Pexels.com
    

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  • Poem: Drifting – 19/02/20

    Poem: Drifting – 19/02/20

    I float above the surface,
    Like a piece of driftwood, an otter, a daring platypus,
    I rise to the challenge,
    God, you know I’m here listening for you like I should.
     
    I’ve risen to the moment,
    Where I can drift along the water,
    Towards the shore,
    Certain in myself that this path I’m undertaking
    Is finally the right one,
    And it’ll be eternal,
    Not blunted or short.
     
    I will seek the advice of the angels within my life,
    The living beings,
    Brought forth to assist me,
    They have gathered around my dying body many a time
    And arisen I have become, always been,
    Perhaps I have been blessed by someone divine.
     
    I have always been saved,
    From the damage of my hand or by others’ wicked ways,
    And I thank you, dear Father,
    Because of your divine intervention,
    Seamless and true,
    Without sight of stitch nor glue,
    You, are the correct path,
    I must herald myself unto.
     
    With my guides and my angels
    Perhaps I’ll find the right avenues to take,
    To this blessed acceptance and awakening
    And acknowledgement,
    The three A’s,
    Cast aside is the need for attention,
    I’m now happily quiet within myself,
    I need not their eyes staring or voices blatant calling,
    I’ve been through that long ago.
     
    But this decision I have made,
    I have not made it lightly,
    And I trust,
    I do trust,
    That I will traverse the journey wholly.
    
    © 2020 Lauren M. Hancock. All rights reserved.
    Image by Jana from Pixabay

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  • Poem: Scent by the Hearth – 19/02/20

    Poem: Scent by the Hearth – 19/02/20

    I remember the scent by the hearth,
    where you and I laid that night.
    The sweet oil of ylang ylang permeating,
    Heavenly, unique.
     
    My heart, it beat wildly from your touch,
    there was nothing I wanted more,
    and as our feet entwined by flickering flames encased only
    by metal and heated glass,
    I wonder now, did you feel the same?
     
    The emotions,
    a sense of wild abandon,
    a striking feeling between my shoulder blades,
    as though I’d been sledged in the middle,
    split into two,
    one piece for me,
    and the other for you.
     
    Then with your magical touch I would conjoin once more,
    become the woman that you’ve always loved and adored,
    and now I understand that it can take a mere whiff of a scent to
    dredge up a wanted memory,
    from something, somewhere, that was encased so pretty.
     
    By the hearth, my dear, is how I most remember you,
    by the fire,
    wild and free,
    flames flickering with ease,
    and I can smell that carrier oil,
    which we used in its purest form,
    to tide the gentlest touches into firmer movements
    with dexterity
    until the morn.
    © 2020 Lauren M. Hancock. All rights reserved.
    Image by judenicholson from Pixabay

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  • Poem: Cigarette Clouds and Pine Leaves – 18/02/20

    Poem: Cigarette Clouds and Pine Leaves – 18/02/20

    The surrounding scent of pine leaves invades my sensitive nostrils,
    Since quitting smoking I have been able to discern more,
    And my taste buds, they are rearing,
    They sing for attention,
    These senses,
    They are heightened.
     
    No more dulling from the poisons within those 
    death sticks,
    A retraction of the chemical clouds which 
    Weighted not only my head
    But also my mind,
    And made light of my hip pocket
    In exchange for the risk of ill health.
     
    And now I know, that of this horrid habit,
    I have succeeded beyond it,
    Grown stronger, 
    From the many years I had inhaled 
    The carcinogenic compounds of danger.
    
    I don’t pity those who continue,
    But I wish they had the strength to put them down, too,
    I pray for those who feel they don’t need rescue,
    How much longer must they punish themselves
    Before they can no longer rasp for help,
    For their release?
     
    Perhaps they’ll come to a realisation, too,
    Just like me, I realised, I couldn’t continue,
    For my own personal reasons, 
    And for the sake of my health,
    I came out of this struggle stronger,
    Fighting,
    With more willpower and determination
    Than I believed I could grasp on my own.
     
    The pine leaves emit their delicious odour,
    I thank the heavens that I am still here to experience their scent with wonder,
    With admiration and health,
    Perhaps I quit before it was too late for myself.  
    
    © 2020 Lauren M. Hancock. All rights reserved.
    Image by Free-Photos from Pixabay

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  • Poem: Treasures of Time – 18/02/20

    Poem: Treasures of Time – 18/02/20

    I treasure them like a baby treasures his first blankie,
    I hold them close and stroke them gently,
    calmly, lovingly.
     
    I understand that we may not
    remain together always,
    that soon I will be too overgrown
    to walk with them in public,
    that I must instead shy away from their presence and
    observe them only in the dimness of my room.
     
    These sparkling moments,
    these memories I treasure,
    will not remain with me forever,
    but sooner enough I will trip with them,
    I will surely falter.
     
    Because while clutching onto the past
    could prove a wondrous thing
    an analysis of everything that occurred
    may create a sense of longing,
    and what I find most extraordinary is that
    if I chose to live in my memories,
    in my dreams,
    then how could I possible live and exist in the present?
     
    In the future I could not surmise of my effects caused from
    a behaviour of the present,
    and determining how forth I will go
    is really, well, a challenge.
     
    Clutching onto straws, sucking the marrow from the past,
    the richness, its richness, undying, those moments are,
    and I smile to myself, finally realising that we in ourselves
    can be way too much to put up with, even for ourselves,
    and dust to dust we will become,
    our memories now disintegrated, gone, disregearded.
     
    At least we tried to reign them in,
    protect them all along.  
    Image by Michal Jarmoluk from Pixabay
    © 2020 Lauren M. Hancock. All rights reserved.

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  • Poetry: Stability – 17/02/20

    Poetry: Stability – 17/02/20

    I once had a metaphorical finger waggled in front of my face: “I know what you want.”
    “Stability,” I blurted out.
     
    I needed to feel settled, I needed to feel wanted, I needed to feel, well, loved. I had been on a trek through life trying to find the right one – is there even such a thing for me? I’d occasionally wonder.
     
    But the truth of the matter is, I was yearning, desperately hoping that the one who asked me was the right one. It was not meant to be. Details are frivolous, yet the feelings behind them are not.
     
    I knew that I needed to firstly love myself, but how could I be expected to do so when every part of me screamed that I wasn’t good enough? I had my head in the clouds, peeking through to the sun, and still, the damage to my eyes in the glare was done.
     
    I was imperfectly perfect, as well are, as we all are designed to be. Nothing personal, but we can counter ourselves in the wind or the air, or upon the land, or in fire, or within the sea, all we need is a slight understanding of the word ‘Me’, and what it encompasses.
     
    It speaks of everything that we are, within two simple letters, capitalised, not, Meeeee, I can yawn the vowels out wide, like a yowling cat, a mama I’m still to find.
     
    My search would continue on, the search for myself swept to the side, and in every new face I met, there was a lack of recognition, a mirroring that wasn’t present in the eyes before me in which I was searching.
     
    Maybe one day, this stability would come. Maybe the next day, or the day after that, my desire would come to fruition, and  become whole and known.  
     
    © 2020 Lauren M. Hancock. All rights reserved.
    Image by Andreas Breitling from Pixabay

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  • Poem: Sensing – 16/02/20

    Poem: Sensing – 16/02/20

    Like worms in the ground we can slide through life blindly,
    only sensing, never seeing what’s right before us.
    And as though it’s magic, our touch and sense of smell
    are heightened, guiding us through the rough,
    the damp welcoming soil.
     
    Like the understanding that somehow we must place
    our trust in that which we cannot completely, wholly trust,
    because while seeing is believing, how are touch or smell enough as
    indicators to ensure that we are on the right path?
     
    Perhaps we need another guider,
    to lead us into the way of the righteous,
    because, as the exploring worm will understand,
    sometimes it can lead itself astray.
     
    Picture after a fresh summer’s rain the amount of worms
    capsized upon the pavement,
    miles away from comfort, from the land they know,
    they’re crawling, they’re wriggling,
    set to cook and die in the sun.
     
    Perhaps someone kind will rescue them all,
    but that’s unlikely,
    they led themselves there, searching for a new land so incorrect
    that their demise has been promised all along.
     
    But we are not entirely like these blind, hopeful beings,
    we have the capacity, to intelligibly think, analyse, surmise,
    and here we understand that while living blindly,
    with a sense of waywardness about us
    is something to commend,
    it’s also a method rather risky,
    and maybe something of which maybe not to contend.
    © 2020 Lauren M. Hancock. All rights reserved.
    Photo by Racheal Lomas on Unsplash

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  • Poem: Nowhere Woman – 16/02/20

    Poem: Nowhere Woman – 16/02/20

    I’ve been lost for so many years,
    hidden in the recesses of the wilderness
    and I don’t know which way is out.
    I'm unsure of how to escape this listless, pointless path without direction,
    without a propelling sense of purpose.
     
    I once was utterly focused,
    I wanted to be something,
    make something of myself,
    and now I don’t know where to turn,
    to a person, to pen to paper, to God?
    Is He really there for me?
     
    I feel silly as I sit here and address 
    the benevolent being up above,
    thanking Him for that which remains,
    my blessings in life,
    the goodness,
    through my gratitude,
    but all I can manage is to bawl and bawl,
    tears helplessly fall,
    and I cannot, for the life of me,
    stop,
    I don’t want to stop.
    I desire change.
     
    I ache for it,
    I yearn for it,
    a nowhere person I’ve been,
    life is stagnant,
    no longer flighty,
    and I surmise pieces of my puzzle can be adjusted 
    one piece at a time,
    but I am covered with soap suds,
    my fingers slip,
    I’m trying to unnecessarily cleanse while rebuilding a life.
     
    How difficult must it be to isolate my innermost thoughts
    when I struggle to comprehend them, let alone articulate them?
    It's been suggested I search for Him up above,
    to reconnect, to recreate
    a bond of acceptance, gratitude, and I suppose
    acceptance of His undying love,
    but its been so long, how can I trust,
    and place my life and sufferings into another’s open hands?
     
    The tears continue to fall,
    it’s ironic –
    you’ll rarely see me cry.  
    © 2020 Lauren M. Hancock. All rights reserved.
    Image by Free-Photos from Pixabay

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  • Poem: Found Beauty – 15/02/20

    Poem: Found Beauty – 15/02/20

    Seek the beauty within their eyes,
    Their swollen pupils are quiet
    yet they speak with booming silence.
     
    When you view the allure between gentle palms,
    The softened skin strokes,
    Muscles unwind,
    A heavenly song.
     
    When you find the wonder within another’s truth
    When you can connect with their experiences
    feel their joyous nature and with them experience anew.
     
    When you don’t seek superficial beauty but
    Appreciate the internal view you’ve been shown
    that’s when your heart will blossom,
    that’s when your heart will truly grow.
    
    © 2020 Lauren M. Hancock. All rights reserved.
    Photo by Ylanite Koppens on Pexels.com

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  • Poem: Perfectly Ordinary – 15/02/20

    Poem: Perfectly Ordinary – 15/02/20

    There will be times when you’re viewed as ordinary,
    Nothing special about you.
    Nothing that others can glimpse upon,
    A spark,
    A light,
    They view you as nothing,
    They pass you by.
     
    Their eyes dart away when you meet their disengaged pair,
    They don’t want to acknowledge you,
    To validate your existence,
    And while you shouldn’t care for how others may judge,
    It hurts that tiny little bit,
    They don’t know my story.
    They don’t even care.
     
    They view you as lowly,
    They view you as beneath them,
    Surely that’s why they possess that pathetic look in their eyes
    That somehow proves your presence is unworthy of being in theirs.
     
    I can view the fake smiles now,
    The overly chirpy conversations,
    Whereas once genuineness and sincerity were simply commonplace.
     
    And I wonder, what has changed?
    To make me be viewed lesser than what I am?
    No matter how I take this,
    It’s detrimental to my soul,
    Because I’m a sociable being,
    And being airily brushed aside for no apparent reason at all,
    Seems unfair and something which may fling itself toward them,
    Bite them,
    Karma will come.  
     
    © 2020 Lauren M. Hancock. All rights reserved.
    Photo by Mochammad Algi on Pexels.com

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