Ashes in My Pockets
Grief we carry, and the small warmth left after flame.

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.
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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