Poetry
1 min
Life is a Box Office Hit
Sehej Pawar
I didn't cry watching The Notebook,
but I cried on my 17th birthday,
when the candles felt more like countdowns
than celebrations.
I didn't cry watching Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,
but La La Land messed me up,
not because they didn't end up together,
but because sometimes, dreams win over love.
I didn't cry watching Titanic,
but I did when I found an old voicemail
and realized I'd never hear that voice in real life again.
I didn't cry watching Good Will Hunting,
but Toy Story 3 hit too close,
not because Andy left,
but because I knew I would too.
I laughed at Scream, didn't flinch at The Conjuring,
but my hands shook reading an old text,
like ghosts can haunt phones too.
I tell myself I'm fine.
That I don't feel things like I used to.
That I've learned how to sit with the pain.
But then I hear The Perks of Being a Wallflower,
"we accept the love we think we deserve,"
and I wonder
if I ever deserved any at all.
but I cried on my 17th birthday,
when the candles felt more like countdowns
than celebrations.
I didn't cry watching Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,
but La La Land messed me up,
not because they didn't end up together,
but because sometimes, dreams win over love.
I didn't cry watching Titanic,
but I did when I found an old voicemail
and realized I'd never hear that voice in real life again.
I didn't cry watching Good Will Hunting,
but Toy Story 3 hit too close,
not because Andy left,
but because I knew I would too.
I laughed at Scream, didn't flinch at The Conjuring,
but my hands shook reading an old text,
like ghosts can haunt phones too.
I tell myself I'm fine.
That I don't feel things like I used to.
That I've learned how to sit with the pain.
But then I hear The Perks of Being a Wallflower,
"we accept the love we think we deserve,"
and I wonder
if I ever deserved any at all.
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