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Tea About Trauma: A Second Cup

A memory too hot to handle

By Marilyn GloverPublished 7 months ago 1 min read
Tea About Trauma: A Second Cup
Photo by mohammed idris djoudi on Unsplash

Boiled and brewed, ready to drink

My lips press the rim, sipping slowly

Burning my tongue and throat instantly

Honey and ginger, sweet and spicy

Settle in my stomach, causing turbulence

My mind starts racing

My hands start shaking

I slam the teacup down on the counter

Spilling the brew

As I slide down the kitchen wall

Cup contents run off ceramic tile

Pooling on the floor

I pant erratically, recalling a different burn

Oxidation levels are dangerously low

Lower like HIM and his inhumane act

Memories come full fold

Holding me captive in floor space

Spacing out, I go back to that day

When our three-year-old daughter

A baby, just a child, told me what he did

He stood over me while I slept, wielding a blade

"Down, he was pointing it down, Mama"

She told me the next morning after he left for work

When I found the knife in question under his pillow

Up in the evening, Blessed the child, daughter of same name

Saw him and interrupted his attempts with a scream

Shaking me to my core, waking me to a full standing up

I need to clean up the tea, but I can't reach the teacup...

Saved me, she saved me, but she was only a child

Rocking back and forth on the floor, I can barely breathe

I need an ambulance; I am dying- someone help me

No, I am alive; this is a traumatic memory

One that creeps in whenever I least expect it

It's roasting in this kitchen; I have to turn off the burner

The tea kettle is still whistling, but I cannot move

I forgot to cut off the fire when another reignited

Handle it, handle it, I try, but this memory is too hot

***

Author's note: This is the sister poem to my Acrostic version based on a real-life event, a memory that often comes rushing in, one that, although many years later, is often still too hot to handle.

fact or fictionFamilyFree VerseMental Healthsurreal poetry

About the Creator

Marilyn Glover

Poet, writer, & editor, writing to uplift humanity. A Spiritual person who practices Reiki and finds inspiration in nature.

Mother of four, grandmother of two, British American dual citizen living in the States

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  1. Compelling and original writing

    Creative use of language & vocab

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    Well-structured & engaging content

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    The story invoked strong personal emotions

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Comments (11)

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  • R.S. Sillanpaa6 months ago

    An exceptional poem, haunting. Thank you for writing and sharing it with the Vocal world.

  • L.C. Schäfer7 months ago

    Intense 😣

  • Excellent take on the challenge… hideous experience, I trust it fades with time. What a blessing your daughter intervened.

  • Rachel Deeming7 months ago

    Marilyn, I was there with you. This was so descriptive and the memory resurgence so sudden...What an experience to have had and your daughter too?

  • I'll forever be grateful to your daughter. Sending you lots of love and hugs ❤️

  • Caroline Craven7 months ago

    I have no words Marilyn. I’m just so sorry you had to go through this. Your poem was something else. Wishing you all the best.

  • JBaz7 months ago

    Memeories that live forever in our minds. You wrote a strong poem of personal issues that burn hotter than one should have to tolerate.

  • Euan Brennan7 months ago

    I will always tell you how much the world loves you, Marilyn, and how everyone is grateful to your daughter for saving you. I hope writing these poems is giving you some form of relief to the turbulence you are enduring. Stay strong! <3

  • You have created a poem that lives it...and triumphs over what must have been a truly traumatic experience. Great work, Marilyn.

  • Cindy Calder7 months ago

    Whoa....what a powerful poem you've woven from such a traumatic and devastating memory. The enormous rush of adrenaline and fear felt by narrator is truly felt by your reader, too. Stupendous, evocative writing.

  • angela hepworth7 months ago

    This is absolutely terrifying :(

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