There are pieces of dreams in my teeth,
Leftover kernels of lives missed.
A sprinkling of this, a dash of that,
And I can taste who I wanted to be
With any number of people
But there is no me between my molars.
.
There is no self-identity at all,
Just clean mirrors reflecting the dream
Of becoming a piece of someone's future.
But I don't know now who I was.
What did I want? To be loved.
What did I dream of? To be noticed.
.
I'm sitting in a room, alone,
With lights I bought because I could see,
In my overactive imagination,
How much you would love their glow.
But I can't see my desk at all
Or any of the writing on the walls.
.
Yet, I can taste the cocktail of souls
I dreamt of loving me in their arms
Fermenting between my teeth,
Turning into something nearly rotten,
Bordering on it but not quite there.
I can taste my imagination.
.
It's sweet.
The kind of thing to get me drunk
And make me taste the regrets
Of dreaming like this in the morning.
It's like drinking rainwater
Fresh out of a turbulent sky.
.
And, of course, I can only imagine
That you would like this too.
You'd want this recipe scratched
Onto some coffee-stained post-it
So you could stick it to your desk
And feel the love I'll never have.
About the Creator
Silver Daux
Shadowed souls, cursed magic, poetry that tangles itself in your soul and yanks out the ugly darkness from within. Maybe there's something broken in me, but it's in you too.
Ah, also:
Tiktok/Insta: harbingerofsnake

Comments (6)
"But there is no me between my molars." Aaaand THAT is the scariest potential of any horror movie...individual erasure. It doesn't make a sound. A graphic hard-hitting line. Great work! .
You can string seemingly distinct imagery into such fluid progressions! From the teeth, to the mirror, to the lights, to the drink, to the storm, and finally the recipe card, the movements are all flawless!
Wow. You did it again. Had me hooked from the first line!
Stunning as usual. The fierceness with the aching, rubbing against the incessant irritation of something in your mouth... it's compelling.
This started off strong and kept pace all the way through.
Vision is really a beautifully painful dive into longing, identity, and the echoes of unmet dreams.