Home
when they sold the house
something stayed behind
that I could not return to
I was twenty
living alone
in rooms that knew my name
but not my weight
after that —
heat that pressed against the lungs
streets that ran before they burned
meals I could not name
and always,
a rhythm
I had to learn
with my whole body
and I learned
home is a small arrangement;
a painting
placed where light agrees
a pillow
that knows my shape
one object
that remembers
and that is enough
Written for Writers’ Digest Poem-a-Day Challenge for April 2026. Prompt word: Home

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