New Hell
(new home)
I went to hell
it was country green,
nature thrived on the nights I cried;
when we moved there, it was the most beautiful place I’d ever seen.
I sought a peace I couldn’t find,
anything to calm my mind
and keep my racing thoughts
away from the memories I couldn’t forget.
I said to myself,
‘These sheep will keep the memories at bay,
so will my poetry. And the chickens, they’re fun to play with. I’ll find a nice boyfriend at church
and I’ll keep on singing,
I feel sad inside
and sometimes I act weird
and I don’t know why’,
and it’s because
I went to hell,
it was country green.
When we moved there,
it was the most beautiful place I’d ever seen; but I ached inside in a way that made me hold my arms close to my body,
tight,
watching myself back on family video I see
how uncomfortable I was in my skin,
around the ones I loved,
but they always celebrated me, and I’m grateful for that,
and for the visible difference I saw
within myself
within my body
I guess trauma matured with my age; it just got worse,
having a good and bad inside me has been
exhausting:
I play devils advocate against my
own mind,
every single day,
and now I’m medicated in a way that makes me numb;
I didn’t want my life to take this turn
but that’s what happens when
you go to hell.
You notice,
‘this country green looks…
off.
It has an underlying darkness about it
I can’t put my finger on.
I have moved to a place
that doesn’t understand me,’ I sob into conversations with god as a teenager,
I lash out at my parents but the good inside me knows it’s because my spirit is
dying inside;
nature stopped thriving
because I stopped crying,
and I became an empty vessel,
waiting to be recognised.
I went to hell.
It was country green,
nature thrived on the nights I cried; when we moved there, it was the most beautiful place I’d ever seen.
Eventually, I understood why we moved there.
The situations that uncovered became less
beautiful over time.
I guess that’s what trauma does,
unhealed,
unheard.
It sits in the car ride over
on your first day moving into your new home,
you are unpacking your unhealed
into your new,
as you open the car door and spill out into the fresh,
country green…
this was meant to be a new start;
but nature doesn’t thrive anymore.
this new home feels more like a new hell,
in fact it was;
just,
a replacement of your old one.













