The Last Song: Ode to an Idle Violin

They once made beautiful music together, until she was desperate for more.
Something much greater for her was out there—a feeling she just couldn’t ignore.

Spent years of her life playing second fiddle, moving with the symphony.
Never once did she think leaving would be her only remedy. 

But from age nine to twice as many years passed, they had grown apart from each other. 
With this crescendo building in her soul, she knew she couldn’t stay much longer.

She knew the day when she would play her last song, 
she sat center stage, under the glaring spotlight, wondering where it all went wrong. 

But it was time for her to face the music and get her life on track,
so she packed away her things then never looked back.

So this is her ode to an idle violin, laid to rest in velvet, all those years ago.
She’d found herself through composing her own poetic pieces, soon as she wasn’t afraid of letting go. 

~~~

You can find this poem in my debut poetry book If I Bare My Soul: a collection of poetry & prose available to order only on Amazon!

The Phony Poet

In honor of World Poetry Day, here’s poem about a poet (me) who has only ever written her works via keyboard and computer screen to comply with the way this modernized society works, yet at the same time, often writing about her deep love for paper and the pen, which can at times feel “phony”. ✍🏻

Written in between these lines
are little lies, 
told by a poet who holds some secrets—
though she’s not sure how much longer she can keep them. 

The poet, who’s written of her love for the pen
time and time again,
truthfully, has yet to ink her words by hand onto pages in black.
She’s an imposter—who wears many masks.

Rather she’s been hiding behind a screen, 
ever since the world around her 
was taken over 
by these tempting technologies. 

She wants you to believe
that her words are told with pure sincerity.
Yet all she can do is feel guilty
as she sits back and watches libraries, precious sheets
of paper, and beloved books become obsolete.

The only feeling she really knows, is the touch of her fingertips to a keyboard—
that only leaves her hankering for something more. 

As she types,
she’s haunted 
by the sounds of these keys—click, click, click
She tosses and turns at night, 
feeling taunted 
by the cries of the clock in her mind that never ceases to tick, tick, tick.

Unknown, is just how much time there is left, 
so residing within her, are all these regrets. 
If only she could, she’d go back to a time
when the grace of a quill pen was still cherished and live amongst the greatest poets alive.

Think she ought to give up this charade,
pick up a pen, and let go of this masquerade. 
Because until then, no one will ever truly see
the beauty of it all and once it’s too late, all she might ever be known as—is the phony.