The House I Never Found
A lyrical poem about the lifelong search for belonging, the ache of impermanence, and building a home from moments instead of walls.

I was born beneath a roof of thunder,
Where silence rattled louder than the storms.
Walls remembered names I never learned,
And floors creaked with footsteps that weren't mine.
I carried home like a folded map,
Lines blurred from all the times I wept on it.
Every stop felt like an almost-place,
A maybe, a nearly, a not-quite-home.
I’ve tried to find my shelter in people—
Lovers who spoke in promises
Like keys jingling on a ring
That never fit my door.
I knocked on poems.
I bled in pages.
I unpacked my ache into metaphors,
But metaphors aren’t mattresses.
And poems don’t hold you at night.
The truth?
I’ve grown addicted to leaving—
The rush of goodbyes,
The sobering silence of new beginnings.
I call it freedom.
But maybe it’s fear, dressed as flight.
Still, I build.
I build with hands blistered by hope,
Stacking moments like bricks:
The stranger who smiled when I dropped my books.
The sun that warmed my back on a cold day.
The friend who stayed.
Maybe home isn’t a place.
Maybe it’s the moments you choose to keep.
The light you don’t let go of.
The love you dare to believe in
Even when it’s gone.
So I carry that now—
A home stitched from softness,
Tucked between heartbreak and healing.
And one day, maybe,
Someone will walk in without knocking
And recognize the walls I built
And say,
“I’ve been looking for this, too.”
About the Creator
Zakir Ullah
I am so glad that you are here.




Comments (5)
Captivating poem and well written.
support me please
This poem beautifully captures the fragile, ongoing journey of creating home from fleeting moments, love, and hope rather than bricks and mortar.
Nice poetry 🍀🍀🍀
Very nice