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Ashes in My Pockets

Grief we carry, and the small warmth left after flame.

By Milan MilicPublished 3 months ago 1 min read

Ashes in My Pockets

I leave the house lighter,

But only because I’m carrying less fire.

In my coat—two small furnaces

gone cold enough to hold:

scraps of yesterday’s letters,

a ticket stub that burned too slowly,

the brittle syllables we couldn’t unsay.

I walk like a candle with its tongue bitten,

smoke, remembering the shape of flame.

Crosswalks blink their patient metronomes.

I keep time with my ghost.

On the bridge, wind scouts my seams,

tries every stitch like a locksmith.

A few gray flakes escape, hover,

and decide the river can keep them.

I want to scatter what I saved,

but grief is practical—

It likes containers.

Pockets. Jars. The long drawer

where I fold my sharper midnights.

I reach in, blacken my fingers,

and touch my face the way

a miner checks the vein—

not for gold,

just to be sure it’s still there.

You once said love should be heat,

not smoke. I believed you,

Then learned how winter works:

Some nights, the ashes warm the hands

that can’t find any fire.

At home, I empty the lining—

a soft gray weather on the dresser.

I whisper the names of what we burned,

sift out a seed of an unlit future,

and tuck it back—for planting,

for when the ground remembers how.

ElegyFree Verseheartbreaklove poemsMental Healthsad poetryStream of Consciousnessinspirational

About the Creator

Milan Milic

Hi, I’m Milan. I write about love, fear, money, and everything in between — wherever inspiration goes. My brain doesn’t stick to one genre.

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