Tag: love and loss

  • A 33-Year-Old Trans Man’s Story of Love, Loss, Poetry, and Change

    A 33-Year-Old Trans Man’s Story of Love, Loss, Poetry, and Change

    Describe your life in an alternate universe.

    In this alternate universe, I’m still me. I am thirty-three years old and a trans man in Ohio. I carry the same stubborn heart and sharp edges. The difference is the weight on my chest is lighter here.

    The mornings still smell like coffee and fresh air. The seasons still move in the same Ohio rhythm. Summers are humid enough to feel like they could melt the skin right off your bones. Autumns are painted in fire-orange leaves. Winters slap your face awake the moment you step outside. But the biggest difference? In this version of my life, I wake up knowing I’m not alone in my fight.

    My Mom is Still Here, and that’s what matters most to me. Here, my mom is alive. Not just alive and thriving. She’s still my best friend, my safe place, my person. She’s the one I go to with half-baked ideas at midnight. Not only that, but she laughs with me over dumb memes. She sits beside me when my anxiety tries to chew through my ribs. The one who hears all my poetry first.

    We run my indie grassroots publishing company together. Her hands are always warm from holding a coffee mug, and mine are always stained with ink. Our kitchen table is permanently cluttered with stacks of manuscripts. Sticky notes are everywhere. There’s even the occasional stray pen cap that the cat tried to run off with. There’s cinnamon-scented candles burning most days, mixed with the faint metallic tang of printer ink. If you didn’t know, the idea that started this publishing house sprouted in me because of my mom’s constant reminder. She always said, “all people should be treated equally.”

    She would keep me grounded when I spiral into twenty new projects at once. I would nurture her belief. We can change the world with the right words. Art in the right hands amplifies this change.

    My Dad is a Ghost in the Story. My dad exists here too, but only as a background shadow. He has no voice in my life, no influence on my peace. I’ve shut that door and bricked it over. There’s no need for him in this world I’m building. He allowed my stepdad to adopt me. He chose this instead of refusing to be a dad and refusing to sign over his rights to me.

    My Siblings. My two sisters? Still my anchors. We don’t always agree, but the love is steady and sure. In this universe, my estranged brothers have returned to my life. Their return is not in a perfect, movie-ending way. Instead, it is in small, awkward steps. We’ve had conversations that leave the door open instead of slamming it shut. And they learned to understand that their experience with my father is not theirs and vice versa.

    Softball & School… Some things never change. I still played softball through school. I love the sound the crack of the bat makes. I love the dirt flying as I slid into base. I also love the smell of fresh-cut grass on a summer morning before a big game. I was always the loudest on the team, and I was just as fierce on the field. I still dropped out of high school. Still got my GED. But here, it wasn’t just about survival. And it was a conscious move toward freedom. I knew I could build something better outside the system that never made space for me.

    Poetry & Publishing…. In both universes, poetry runs in my veins. It’s messy, it’s raw, it’s how I breathe. I still self-published my first book. Still remember holding it in my hands, heart racing because my words were finally real. Still remember the first time my work appeared in a literary magazine and thinking, This is just the beginning. I actually get to show my mom here. This is unlike in the real world, where I didn’t get my shit together before she left us.

    But here, my publishing company is more than just my own platform. It’s a loud, unapologetic space for voices the world tries to silence. We focus on queer, trans, neurodivergent, disabled, Black and brown writers. We include survivors and anyone whose truth is too big for the narrow shelves of mainstream publishing. We make sure our books aren’t just printed, but seen. We send them to schools that actually care about representation. These libraries make space for more than just the “safe” stories. Our books go into the hands of readers who need them like air.

    Love Without Apology…. In this world, I’m still engaged. Still in love in a way that feels like safety and home. But here, we don’t guard our love. And we live it out loud. We dream big together, and when the fight for justice gets heavy, we hold each other steady. We talk about everything, about building a life where our identities aren’t just accepted, they’re celebrated. And we are always there when it matters most. Nothing really changes in the alternate world for Kelsey and I. I couldn’t wish for them to be any better than they are.

    The Change We’re Fighting For, the mission hasn’t changed: I want to be part of the change the world needs. In this alternate universe, we’re further along. Minority groups aren’t just existing, they’re thriving. Our art fills galleries, our books fill shelves, our stories are taught alongside the classics. No one questions whether we belong. We do. And the proof is everywhere.

    My Mother’s Words… On the days I feel tired, her voice is there. It is steady and certain: “They can’t erase what we refuse to let go of.” “Every life matters big or small.” “Someone thinks you’re scary too and they don’t squash you.” (The latter is in reference to bugs.) Those words are stitched into my bones. They remind me why I keep building. They remind me why I keep writing. They remind me why I keep showing up even when the world tries to push back. This is what keeps me going, having to live in the real world.

    But in this alternate universe, I’m still me. I’m the kid who played softball. I’m the girl who dropped out and found his own way. I’m the poet who refuses to be quiet. The difference is, here, the world listens a little closer. Here the world accepts me and others for what we truly are.

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    a poem about my mom

  • The world took you. And They Took Her From Me Too

    The world took you. And They Took Her From Me Too

    It’s been almost four years since my mom died

    Four years this November as always 8 days before my birthday.

    And Wednesday

    I finally got to see her dog again.

    The last living pet my mom had left.

    The last heartbeat in this world that still carried her by choice and not birth.

    The only one who remembered both of us and my sisters.

    The only one left who still held my mom’s scent, her rhythm, her quiet love. The reason it was so easy to decide to bring mom home. Jewel. She was my sibling too.

    I hadn’t seen her since the day we lost my mom

    Not once. She stole mom’s favorite blanket and my mom’s husband stole my ability to see her basically in unity.

    Because a man that knew the dog 3 years and was married to my mom the same wouldn’t let me come around. As if he loved them all the entire time I did.

    And after he died

    My sister took her thankfully.

    Sadly her pos excuse for a ex boyfriend wouldn’t let me come around

    He was abusing my sister. It’s no secret. The public charges aired that out.

    So everything in her world became locked down, closed off, unreachable by his choice

    I was shut out

    While the last piece of my mom grew older and slower without me

    While I sat in that absence

    Hurting

    Helpless

    Then earlier this week I hear she’s sick, and by Wednesday my sister is putting her down. It felt like the next time I turned around. So I went and saw her, my sister was able to secure the vet the next day to by us time.

    One final time and we know that isn’t ever really enough time to say good bye.

    I gave her a big meal from Wendy’s, nuggets, burgers, and ice cream.

    I told her she was good

    I told her I loved her

    I held her. I told her she got to see mom first and I was jealous. I told her about all the pets before her and family she’d get too great. I couldn’t stop telling her that mom would be there soon.

    I know she knew that we were up to something.

    Then today

    My sister took her to the vet

    She was put to sleep

    And cremated

    And now she’s gone too.

    This is grief that burns

    Grief that screams

    Grief that doesn’t just cry over what happened

    But over everything that didn’t

    Everything I never got to do

    All the years I could have been beside her

    All the comfort we could have shared in missing the same person

    The same lap

    The same voice

    I didn’t just lose her

    I was kept from her

    And then I lost her anyway.

    She didn’t just die

    She was taken from me long before today

    And then taken again.

    I’m so fucking tired of things being stolen from me.

    She was more than a dog

    She was the last piece of my mother I could touch that Isn’t a human.

    The last one who knew the way home used to smell.

    The last little soul who got to grieve my mom with me finally returning to her. But I wasn’t ready.

    Rest easy, sweet girl

    I hope you’re curled up with her again.

    I hope you both know I never stopped loving either of you

    Tell her I’m still here

    Still hurting

    Still trying

    Still loving

    I am little lighter knowing mom has jewel. I know she has been watching and waiting for her jewely whoolie to come home across the rainbow bridge the last of her fur kids,

    Links poem

  • Laughter. A Raw Poem on Love, Loss, and Lingering Pain.

    Laughter. A Raw Poem on Love, Loss, and Lingering Pain.


    An original poem by: Axton N.O. Mitchell

    I cannot wait to see your name, followed by no,
    Feelings, regret.
    With no thought to complement, no,
    Worry fluttering, butterfly wings,
    Hopelessness; Replacement of happiness,

    This was bliss. I’m happy I fucking lived for this.
    I do not expect you to come, or furthermore you to…
    Sense the sarcasm lingering on my tongue,

    No longer do I linger at your finger,
    I am no puppet but,
    That didn’t make you less of a master.
    I couldn’t even tell you what I was after,
    But this story wasn’t full of laughter.
    I had a picture, frozen in time… etched in my brain,
    You were not the one, I was insane… too think the same.

    Maybe… I really am to blame: for loving someone so wild..
    With intent to tame.
    All I want is to feel feelings… the way I did,
    Before you crept into my brain… sunk into my skin.

    Pour some more gin so I can tell you that you win…
    Even though you will not… give in… go away…
    Get. Out. Of. My. Brain.

    Sheer moments feel like eons, time wasted my love for you… on another.
    When you are what I was after, how will there ever be any laughter.


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  • The Ugliest Truth I Grew From A  Reflection on Betrayal, Trust, and Healing

    The Ugliest Truth I Grew From A Reflection on Betrayal, Trust, and Healing


    Truth

    Some truths do not come wrapped in lessons or soft landings. The ugliest truth I have had to grow from is not about heart break. It is at least not how you would expect it to be. It was not a breakup or a solo betrayal. I learned repeatedly that the people you let closest can hurt you the most. Oftentimes, the knives hide behind hugs.

    Relationships


    I was with this one woman for ten years, a lot of high school and young adulthood. We took a break for a few weeks, and she was married to my “best friend.” Neither of them said a word till’ it was done. Not a warning, or a check-in. Just a wedding announcement with my past all dressed up and pretty in my best man’s arm. Like we hadn’t meant a thing, like I had not trusted her with the worst parts of the last decade… and she the same with me.

    Maybe that’s what made it worse at the time. It wasn’t just about the girl that hurt me. I mean the man was my best friend. The two I thought were going to be my family forever. Turns out they both can forget I even exist in less than two months.

    Then comes in the parade of women who loved the idea of me but never the weight of me. They wanted poetry not presence. They saw me as a soft place to land not a person with his own storms. I would show up, pour in, give them real and all I got in return were lame excuses. Vibes without effort. Promises with no follow through.

    At one point (well actually many points) I made myself believe I was too much. I now know was asking for bare minimum. Match my energy. Mean what you say. Show up like I do.

    What Breaks me

    What breaks me the most isn’t even them. It is the repeated chances I have given most people before and after them. The ugliest truth is that I used to trust too quickly. Believed too deeply. Gave way too much, much too soon. I just did not want to live like the world was full of liars. But the fact simply is some people are. Some people see your heart as something to step around. Some will touch your wounds with dirty fingers. Some will allow you to carry them until you fold under the weight of them.

    And when I finally broke, I rebuilt smaller, and tighter. With iron clad boundaries I hold like barb wire. That’s what growth looked like: not forgiveness and not grace. Just knowing better and loving harder from further away.

    Growth

    I grew from this experience. Not everyone who reaches for you deserves a seat at your table. And trust should never be given before it is actually earned.


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