The Room I Never Let You In
by someone who always smiled too much

I tell you I’m tired,
but not why.
Not that the ache is older than this year
a story in my spine since before I had words
for grief that wasn’t earned.
You ask, Are you okay?
and I shake my head like a puppet made of skin and worry,
mouth full of pleasantries,
while my insides hide a slow burning church
full of unsaid prayers and fire.
I never told you that some mornings
I wake up with my teeth clenched around screams
I don’t remember swallowing.
That my smile is a negotiation
a truce with a war I’m still losing.
I never say
I resent how easy you make joy look.
Or: I love you more than I should
but I am tired of translating myself
into a language you only half listen to.
I don't admit
that silence isn’t peace
it’s armor.
That when I laugh too loud at dinner
I’m trying to bury the sound
of my own undoing.
I want to tell you
how I sometimes imagine
disappearing like mist
not dramatically, just… unnoticed.
Like the extra chair you never sit in.
Like the thoughts that never leave your drafts.
But I stay
Because leaving would be
too obvious.
I say: It’s fine.
I say: Don’t worry about it.
I say: Let’s talk about something else.
And I build a house out of those phrases
brick by brick
until I’m walled in.
You never noticed the door
I never gave you the key.
But tonight
tonight, I am writing the hinges loose
with every syllable.
Because maybe if I say it here
softly enough
honestly enough
you will finally hear
the room I never let you in.
And maybe that will be
the start of
letting myself out.
About the Creator
Tim Carmichael
Tim is an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. He writes about rural life, family, and the places he grew up around. His poetry and essays have appeared in Bloodroot and Coal Dust, his latest book.




Comments (3)
Gosh this was so poignant, emotional, and profound. Loved it!
Wow - I feel this one. 🥺
There are so many great lines in this, delivered with quiet devastation. another brilliant piece. 👏👏👏