I bit my cheek and it tasted like disdain, As if to be careless is to deign And to know every stare carries a heavy weight. I saw eyes even with my gaze affixed to the earth As phantoms rose from it, Their brutal claws leaving gruesome wounds, And I am reduced, Just a stump of a man Who can only be judged. My conjurings feed off my malaise, Their shroud becoming fuller by the second, Until I am consumed by it; Forced into a bitter pit. How does one free themselves from self-treachery? If I close my eyes, It’s all I see. I fear the monster in the mirror most; His stare weighs the heaviest. In the end, Only I can save myself. I must accept the hand I have extended. -k.r.r.
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