Sincerely

In the hush before the storm of words,

Two hearts arrive – late, bruised, half-wild

Carrying the ash of other fires.

The beautiful wreckage of once-upon-a-times

That ended in quiet doors closing.

Yet here we stand,

Not as echoes of who we loved before,

But as two separate inks

Suddenly aware of the same page.

You tilt your head at the same slant of light

That makes a line shiver:

I catch my breath when your metaphor

Lands like a hand on the small of my back.

We speak the same rare dialect-caesura, stanza, the long ache

Of a dash that refuses to reslove.

And oh, the thrill of it –

The shared fever for the unsaid,

The way our pens hover together

Above white fields that have never known

Our particular shade of hunger.

I am giddy with the nearness of

What isn’t written yet:

Stanzas still sleeping in the marrow,

Kisses shaped like questions,

Nights when we will read each other aloud

Until the metaphors bleed into morning.

We are not erasing the past loves-

They taught us the grammar of longing-

But we are turning, together, toward a new syntax.

A syntax trembling with possibility,

Electric with the promise of every poem still waiting

To be born between us.

Let the ink run.

Let the anticipation crackle like static

Before the first shared line.

I am already breathless for

Whatever beautiful disaster we are about to write.

Responses

  1.  Avatar

    Wow, first, congratulations on your blog! I am beyond thrilled you are here and to be on this beautiful, creative journey with you. 

    This poem feels like the moment two people realize they are emotionally and creatively fluent in the same language. What stood out most to me is that it does not treat past love as failure. Instead, those experiences become part of what prepared them to recognize each other. “They taught us the grammar of longing” is such a powerful line because it turns heartbreak into something meaningful rather than something wasted.

    I also love how writing becomes the language of intimacy throughout the poem. Ink, syntax, stanzas, and metaphors all blur the line between creativity and desire. The connection between what you feel intellectually, emotionally, and physically all at once.

    What makes the poem especially moving is its sense of anticipation. It is less about what the relationship already is and more about the beautiful possibility of what it could become. The ending captures that perfectly, embracing both the risk and excitement of beginning something new together.

    Incredible writing!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. New blog beginnings | The Creative Chic Avatar

    […] incredible blogging community can mean so much to someone just starting out. You can find Michael hereThank you all for always being so supportive and kind. I cannot wait to watch his blog grow and see […]

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Christopher Hall Avatar

    The Creative Chic sent me here! I’m very excited to see your writing journey here unfold! I can already tell that I will enjoy your writing style, because this was so wicked good! 👍🏻

    Liked by 1 person

  4. pamperrault21 Avatar

    Hi Michael! I’m Pam and I LOVE poetry. I hope you don’t mind but I’ll be joining you on your blog journey and I’m really looking forward to what you might share with us.

    This poem is truly beautiful – you must be very proud of it! Two lines resonated particularly and I’ve read the poem a few times now:

    “I am giddy with the nearness of What isn’t written yet:” – Brills!

    and

    “I am already breathless for Whatever beautiful disaster we are about to write.” What a perfect ending.

    Thank you for sharing “Sincerely” with us. Best of luck on your blog voyage – I just know you’ll do amazingly well.

    pp

    Liked by 1 person

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