The Jar
For the Father I'm Still Trying to Understand

I saw a video today—
a girl, her hands trembling around a jar she couldn’t open.
She ran to her father,
and with one twist,
he cracked it open like it was nothing.
She won.
He smiled.
And I cried.
Because I remember your hands too—
calloused, tired,
hands that tried to fix things
with too little time
and too much silence in between.
You lived in a rented room,
never a home.
Your love was measured in small rebellions—
gauges in my ears,
late-night drives,
anything Mom said no to,
you said yes—
maybe thinking
“yes” meant “I’m here.”
Maybe “yes” meant “please don’t forget me.”
I haven’t.
Not really.
Even if the memories come like fog through a cracked window.
Even if time and pain and drugs
have scattered them like dust across my mind.
You weren’t strong.
Not in the way I thought I needed.
Not the kind of hero that holds up a house,
but maybe the kind who lifts the jar
when no one else sees it slipping from your fingers.
Maybe you were always just trying—
trying to hold on,
trying to matter.
Maybe your love was quieter,
less obvious,
but still there.
Like a shadow that follows
even after the light changes.
I miss you.
Not perfectly.
Not always clearly.
But deeply.
And some days,
I wish I could run back to you,
jar in hand,
asking for help
just to feel your hands again.
About the Creator
Carolina Borges
I've been pouring my soul onto paper and word docs since 2014
Poet of motherhood, memory & quiet strength
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Comments (1)
Aww very touching. Sorry for your loss. Excellent poem ❤️❤️❤️❤️