Inheritance of Smoke
For Rock's EDGY Challenge!

They told me
anger is unattractive.
So I folded mine
like a receipt
and kept it in my wallet
until the ink faded.
I learned to swallow words
whole.
No chewing.
No taste.
Just a throat trained
to be a hallway.
You walked through me
with muddy boots
and called it weather.
You called it family.
You called it love.
You called it “that’s just how things are.”
I called it
slow arson.
You lit the match
years ago
and blamed the smoke
for existing.
You said I was dramatic
when I coughed.
You said I was sensitive
when my lungs turned black.
You said
“Don’t exaggerate.”
So I didn’t.
I reduced myself
to a polite shadow
that apologized
for taking up oxygen.
Do you know what oxygen does
when you deprive it?
It finds a spark.
I was raised
on silence served as virtue,
obedience plated as holiness,
guilt ladled thick
over every plate.
Eat.
Smile.
Say thank you.
Even when the food
tastes like ash.
You carved your expectations
into my spine
and called it guidance.
You taught me
love is endurance.
That if it hurts
it must be holy.
What a convenient theology.
When I said I was drowning
you handed me
a heavier coat.
When I said I was breaking
you lowered your voice
and asked me
not to make a scene.
You prefer your victims
quiet.
You prefer your damage
deniable.
Here is the inconvenient truth:
I survived you.
I survived the comments
that were “jokes.”
I survived the comparisons
that were “motivation.”
I survived the day
you told me
someone stronger
would have handled it better.
You festering hypocrite,
preaching mercy with a mouth full of matches.
Strength is not silence.
Strength is not shrinking.
Strength is not swallowing glass
and calling it communion.
Strength is looking at the wreckage
and refusing
to call it architecture.
You stand there
perplexed
that I no longer bend.
You call it rebellion.
I call it a spine
finally remembering
what it was built to do.
I am not your project.
Not your proof.
Not your redemption arc.
I am the smoke
you tried to suffocate.
And if the house burns now,
if the walls blister,
if the air tastes metallic—
that is not instability.
That is consequence.
About the Creator
Aarsh Malik
Poet, Storyteller, and Healer.
Sharing self-help insights, fiction, and verse on Vocal.
Anaesthetist.
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Comments (1)
You can feel the tension and the underlying anger wanting to explode. Great poem overflowing with emotion.