Anxiety

Anxiety

A Poem by Emily Murman

Anxiety

            poppies like blood on tissue     sticking sweetly to

            dark dust in a bedroom corner remind me. 

            Listen     wet roots stretch deep into the dense          mildewed clay of memory     (a child quaking on             September asphalt,      woodchips strung in a sweater)

            like cold fingers. I’ve slashed notebooks with cheap             pens    

            force-fed them with feigned inspiration     shoved them       to  peeled wallpaper-dust. I’ve felt for variations in         gilded skin and used fingernails to make crimson run

            (Band-Aid wrappers fluttering like moths under my             ceiling fan).

            I don’t like looking at school pictures

            I don’t like large groups giggling at jokes I don’t      understand

            and I especially hate grey carpets and scribble-primal-child

drawings pinned                           

 

                                 fluorescent lights.

under

 

© 2016 Emily Murman


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Added on May 10, 2016
Last Updated on May 10, 2016
Tags: anxiety, childhood, elementary schools, woodchips, poppies, memory, fluorescent lights

Author

Emily Murman
Emily Murman

Chicago, IL



About
I am a sixteen-year-old artist and writer based in the Chicagoland area. I'm currently a sophomore majoring in creative writing at Lake Forest College. Most of my poetry is very image-heavy and aim.. more..

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