They named it a thorn —
the scratch they found on their skin
one summer when loneliness
bit harder than the sun.
At first, they told stories
of how it bled, how it scabbed,
how it made them special
in a town too small for difference.
Their friends nodded, offered bandages,
believed it was deeper than it was.
So they limped, they winced,
they stitched new sorrow around it —
each thread a borrowed ache.
Years passed. They learned
to walk with a limp no one asked for,
to spin every silence into
a sermon on how to suffer beautifully.
They pressed that thorn to paper,
to lovers’ hearts, to every mirror —
saying, See how brave I am?
And none dared say, There’s nothing there.
When alone, they scratched the old scar,
hoped it might bleed again
to prove the thorn still lived —
that they still had something
to show for all the softness
they buried beneath the wound.
But the thorn had rotted to dust.
All that remained was a limp,
and a story they’d forgotten how to end.
Discover more from Whispers of Insight
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.



