i believe therefore i spoke


iv. i believe therefore i spoke

estefaaano_writes 


-

not that certainty had come to me at last,

nor that my words had found their righteous order,

or the room had made itself ready;

nor that i had become the manner of man 

who bares his chest unto the gale

and held his hands still while he bleeds.


i spoke because the silence had grown corporeal,

of poundage i could feel in the jaw,

clogging the throat;

bitter constriction of a man who has

kept his own counsel so long, 

that holding has become

 indistinguishable from being held; 

who supped full that he has begun

to taste only but himself.


i believe therefore i spoke.


bereft of grace arriving light-like 

through some well-positioned window.

this blight exceeds the older wound.


a man adrift in the dark,

decreeing the cadence of his own voice,

however broken, however unbeautiful,

was preferable to another year of proving 

he could endure the grave without it.


i spoke and it was wrong.

i spoke and what came forth was ungainly,

crushed too long into too narrow a vault,

half-formed, blunt.


but it came forth.


and then, only then, came belief.

faith in the radical, unreasonable proposition that 

i existed sufficiently to warrant being heard;

that my voice was no rude interruption 

of a silence more deserving;

that a man long revenant has retained still 

the sovereign right to part his lips

and mean words from it.


i believe. 

therefore i spoke.

therefore perhaps, 

i am.


☁︎


Comments

  1. Anonymous6/03/2026

    ❤️❤️❤️

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  2. Anonymous6/03/2026

    This is the one that got me.

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  3. Anonymous6/03/2026

    “therefore perhaps, i am” is so stunnnningggg.

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  4. Anonymous6/03/2026

    It feels deeply human to speak before you feel ready.

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  5. kennel6/03/2026

    I love that you admit it was messy. Life is messy, and your words don't need to be in 'righteous order' to matter.

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  6. Anonymous6/03/2026

    I’m so proud of you for choosing your own broken voice over the corporeal silence.

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  7. Anonymous6/03/2026

    This is the most powerful thing you’ve ever written.

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  8. Anonymous6/03/2026

    You warrant being heard, always.

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  9. Anonymous6/03/2026

    The concept of 'proving he could endure the grave without it' is a chillingly accurate description of passive suicidal ideation or deep depression.

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  10. Anonymous6/03/2026

    this one is the heart of the collection for me.

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  11. Anonymous6/03/2026

    i love the ending—therefore perhaps, i am. It feels like a tentative but real beginning.

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  12. firewall6/03/2026

    You don't need a well-positioned window for grace to arrive, and you don't have to wait for things to be less messy.

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  13. Anonymous6/03/2026

    This piece makes me want to celebrate your existence with you.

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  14. Anonymous6/03/2026

    Subverting the classical Cartesian formulation to link existence with externalized speech rather than internal thought is a brilliant philosophical move.

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  15. Anonymous6/03/2026

    The assertion of the 'sovereign right to part his lips' feels like a declaration of independence for the soul.

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  16. Anonymous6/03/2026

    The phrase 'crushed too long into too narrow a vault' provides incredible gothic, physical claustrophobia.

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  17. flaxseed6/03/2026

    i keep thinking about how hard-earned this feels

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  18. Anonymous6/03/2026

    Beautiful work. It feels like a rebirth that still remembers the wound.

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  19. Anonymous6/03/2026

    i need a moment after this one.

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  20. Anonymous6/03/2026

    this poem made me feel seen in a strange way.

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  21. Maddie6/03/2026

    An incredibly moving exploration of what it means to reclaim your own humanity.

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  22. Anonymous6/03/2026

    The ending lines bring a genuine sense of existential relief to the reader.

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  23. Anonymous6/03/2026

    This feels like a radical manifesto on the necessity of creative expression for survival.

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  24. deionized6/03/2026

    The structural use of repetition with 'i believe, therefore i spoke' anchors the poem's evolving meaning beautifully.

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  25. Anonymous6/04/2026

    This poem feels like a long-awaited release of pressure.

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  26. Anonymous6/04/2026

    You are definitely not a ghost anymore.

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  27. Anonymous6/04/2026

    The line 'holding has become indistinguishable from being held' perfectly encapsulates the comfort found in chronic suffering.

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  28. Anonymous6/04/2026

    it feels very brave.

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  29. Anonymous6/04/2026

    The poem feels heavy but triumphant—a rare and difficult balance to strike.

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  30. calling out6/04/2026

    A masterclass in building emotional tension and delivering a justified, powerful resolution.

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  31. Anonymous6/04/2026

    it reads like a resurrection that doesn’t pretend to be clean.

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  32. Anonymous6/04/2026

    So powerful. So quietly triumphant.

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  33. This is the kind of writing that makes people reread lines out loud.

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  34. Anonymous6/04/2026

    “the sound of his own voice, however broken, however unbeautiful” — that line broke me.

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  35. Anonymous6/04/2026

    An exquisite study of the relationship between voice, identity, and existence.

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  36. Anonymous6/04/2026

    This feels like a lifeline for anyone trapped in their own silence.

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  37. Anonymous6/04/2026

    The language is sharp, uncompromised, and deeply resonant. It completely redefines what it means to be brave in the dark.

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  38. The sheer emotional density of every stanza is remarkable.

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  39. new reader6/04/2026

    A truly breathtaking piece of modern literature.

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  40. Anonymous6/04/2026

    An absolute masterpiece that deserves to be anthologized everywhere.

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  41. Anonymous6/04/2026

    The raw honesty of admitting that speaking 'was wrong' and 'ungainly' completely elevates this from a typical empowerment poem.

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  42. Anonymous6/04/2026

    This is a beautiful reclamation of your space in the world!

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  43. Alexander6/04/2026

    I’m holding your hand through the messiness of this belief.

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  44. Fausto6/04/2026

    what i love about this piece is that it treats speaking like survival, not performance.

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  45. Anonymous6/04/2026

    the ending is gorgeous.

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  46. Anonymous6/04/2026

    You didn't need grace to arrive light-like; you made your own light by speaking.

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  47. poetry lover6/04/2026

    The vocabulary is perfectly weighted; created an incredible sonic texture.

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  48. Anonymous6/04/2026

    beautiful and full of quiet resolve.

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  49. Anonymous6/04/2026

    The contrast between a silence 'more deserving' and the 'rude interruption' of a human voice is beautifully tragic.

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  50. Anonymous6/04/2026

    the emotional movement here is so satisfyinggggg.

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  51. Anonymous6/04/2026

    This is going to stay with me for a long time.

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  52. Anonymous6/04/2026

    This speaks deeply to the transition from numbness to active participation in one's own life.

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