I had a really hard time in school. I was bullied, and it was hell every day. I hated it.
I wrote this poem about my time in secondary school, and what I went through.
In the buzzing hallways,
where laughter dances like sunlight,
I walk, a ghost in my own skin,
fading into the backdrop of bright backpacks,
and chatter that feels like daggers.
The walls echo with whispered jibes,
each syllable a pebble thrown,
the sting of their voices, sharp and clear,
as if the world were a stage,
and I—an unwilling performer,
clutching my heart like a fragile token.
Their eyes are hungry predators,
circling, searching for weakness
in the fabric of my being—
they unravel the threads of confidence,
strand by strand,
until I am left, a tapestry unmade.
At lunch, I find solitude in corners,
the weight of silence heavier than stone,
my food untouched,
as laughter rings out,
a melody I am not a part of,
not a note, not a sound.
But inside my chest,
a quiet rebellion stirs,
a flicker of strength, a spark,
as I learn that love can bloom
even in the harshest terrains,
that there are voices that rise,
voices that echo in harmony,
over the din of cruelty.
I gather words like seeds,
plant them in the soil of my dreams,
let them grow into a garden
that blooms fiercely,
coloring the shadows in light.
For every bruise, I will tell my story,
for every tear, a testament to resilience,
and in the mirror, I will paint my face,
not with fear,
but with the colors of hope,
brighter than any insult,
louder than any jeer.
And one day,
I will walk those hallways unbowed,
a warrior in disguise,
holding the truth like a shield,
ready to stand not just for myself,
but for every tender heart
finding its way through
the tangled forest of adolescence.
https://lindaghill.com/2024/08/30/the-friday-reminder-and-prompt-for-socs-aug-31-2024/

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