the world is messy and i don't know what to do with that


i. the world is messy and i don't know what to do with that 

estefaaano_writes 


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ceaseless motion; indifferent becoming.


midst the center of it all have i stood,

a steadfast point,

leaning my heavy soul against all that might endure.


the soft give of passing days, 

overwrit palimpsest of a man 

i have once become and had not strength to keep.


do i possess constitution for this life? 


strange configuration of suffering and light,

body presents but a dull visage 

to its own existence.


a mind that turns upon itself; a fugue,

recursive, cloistered, lost,

drowning in its own depths.


knowing is the bitterest part of it.

knowledge of the wound,

the lacunae i have learnt by heart.


knowledge is not freedom.


a cell whose cold dimensions i have memorized,

cease naught from measuring,

a heavier way to be entombed.


i'm so tired of knowing.

of standing in the susurrus of my own ruin.

of carrying prudence as though carrying 

mere sufficient reason to endure.


☁︎

Comments

  1. Anonymous6/03/2026

    ❤️❤️❤️

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  2. Anonymous6/03/2026

    What a beautiful ache of a poem.

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  3. dilemma6/03/2026

    There’s something very intimate and haunted about this one.

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  4. Anonymous6/03/2026

    I cannot get over 'an overwrit palimpsest of a man.' That line will live rent-free in my mind for months.

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  5. Anonymous6/03/2026

    So raw, so elegant, so real.

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  6. Anonymous6/03/2026

    You always ask if you have the constitution for this life, but just look at how much you've already survived.

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  7. Anonymous6/03/2026

    This poem feels like exhaustion turned into art.

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  8. Anonymous6/03/2026

    honestly? stunning.

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  9. Anonymous6/03/2026

    It sucks that 'knowing is the bitterest part' for you, because your mind is one of the things I love most about you.

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  10. Anonymous6/03/2026

    Seeing you call yourself a 'steadfast point' makes me want to hug you. You don't have to carry the weight of the universe just because you’re strong.

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  11. the poetry council6/03/2026

    such a strong collection. honestly impressed.

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  12. Anonymous6/03/2026

    A masterpiece of contemporary melancholia. I need this on my bookshelf immediately.

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  13. Anonymous6/03/2026

    This feels like a text message you’d send at 3 AM when the world gets too loud. I’m glad you put it into poetry instead of keeping it locked up.

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  14. Anonymous6/03/2026

    This is heavy, but it feels like a necessary purging of thoughts.

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  15. Anonymous6/03/2026

    I love how the poem rejects the cliché that wisdom brings peace. Here, wisdom is just a tape measure for your own tomb.

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  16. Anonymous6/03/2026

    This hit me so hard. The line about “knowledge is not freedom” is going to stay with me.

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  17. cremes6/03/2026

    a really powerful opening piece estefaaano_writes!

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  18. ur_fan6/03/2026

    The way you describe the 'mind that turns upon itself'—I’ve sat across from you at coffee and seen that exact look in your eyes.

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  19. Anonymous6/03/2026

    “knowledge is not freedom” is such a hard line. i keep rereading it.

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  20. Anonymous6/03/2026

    so strong. so raw. so precise.

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  21. Anonymous6/03/2026

    I can feel the physical exhaustion radiating off the page in the final stanza.

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  22. Anonymous6/03/2026

    The sibilance in 'standing in the susurrus of my own ruin' is auditory perfection.

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  23. kerala6/03/2026

    repetition of 'knowledge' and 'knowing' builds a brilliant thematic trap.

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  24. Anonymous6/03/2026

    It speaks to the absolute exhaustion of trying to find logic in an indifferent universe.

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  25. Anonymous6/03/2026

    This captures the grief of losing past versions of yourself that you weren't strong enough to save.

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  26. Anonymous6/03/2026

    An exquisite, agonizing piece of literature.

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  27. Anonymous6/03/2026

    It’s rare to find a poem that articulates the burden of intelligence so without pretension.

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  28. Anonymous6/03/2026

    There is a quiet dignity in the despair presented here.

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  29. the poetry council6/03/2026

    a modern soliloquy on the futility of hyper-awareness.

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  30. Anonymous6/03/2026

    I felt the claustrophobia of the mind so intensely through these verses.

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  31. Anonymous6/03/2026

    The ending line is simple but devastating after all the complex imagery that precedes it.

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  32. Anonymous6/03/2026

    The poem feels like an artifact dug up from a deeply introspective soul.

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  33. Anonymous6/03/2026

    A devastatingly beautiful look at existential dread and cognitive fatigue.

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  34. You aren't entombed yet. You’re still here writing.

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  35. Anonymous6/03/2026

    It hurts to read this, but I'm so grateful for your honesty.

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  36. youngsters6/03/2026

    i felt this in my bones.

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  37. Anonymous6/03/2026

    the emotional tone is so consistent and absorbing.

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  38. Anonymous6/03/2026

    this is the kind of poem that makes you pause before you scroll.

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  39. Anonymous6/03/2026

    the way you write suffering makes it feel almost architectural.

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  40. Anonymous6/03/2026

    i love how controlled the language is even while the feeling is unraveling.
    beautiful work, seriously.

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  41. Anonymous6/04/2026

    “i am so tired of knowing” — yes. That line feels like a whole mood.

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  42. Anonymous6/04/2026

    Gorgeous and devastating.

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  43. partridge6/04/2026

    The language is so rich, but the emotion still feels so naked. I loved this.

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  44. Anonymous6/04/2026

    Absolutely beautiful. The last lines are crushing.

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  45. Anonymous6/04/2026

    You carry prudence like a shield, but it looks like a heavy anchor here.

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  46. Anonymous6/04/2026

    The 'soft give of passing days' feels like you’re watching time slip right through your fingers.

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  47. minion6/04/2026

    Every time you isolate yourself, I imagine you in that 'cloistered' space you wrote about here. Let us in.

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  48. isothermal6/04/2026

    The 'strange configuration of suffering and light' sounds like a beautiful way to describe being human.

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  49. Anonymous6/04/2026

    You've been carrying way too much responsibility for things you can't control.

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  50. grenier6/04/2026

    The tension between 'ceaseless motion' and the 'steadfast point' sets an incredible existential stage right from the jump.

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  51. This is the anthem for anyone who has ever been told they "think too much."

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  52. rectilinear6/04/2026

    this moves seamlessly from the macrocosm of a messy world to the microcosm of a trapped mind.

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    Replies
    1. Comcast6/04/2026

      An incredible study of the burdens of consciousness.

      Delete
  53. Anonymous6/04/2026

    To carry prudence as an obligation rather than a virtue is such a profound psychological insight.

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  54. You’ve always been the observer, the one who 'knows' everything about everyone else. I didn't realize how exhausting that was for you.

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  55. Anonymous6/04/2026

    every line feels earned.

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  56. Anonymous6/04/2026

    that last stretch is gorgeous and sad and very human.

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  57. doom criminal6/04/2026

    I read this twice because the first time just hurt too much in the best way.

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  58. Anonymous6/04/2026

    This feels like staring into your own thoughts and finding them staring back.

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  59. Anonymous6/04/2026

    this feels like it was written from inside someone’s chest. in a good way.

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  60. new reader6/04/2026

    i’m obsessed with the title and the opening line.

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  61. ethnic fry6/04/2026

    That line about standing in the 'susurrus of my own ruin' is so painfully you. You always find the most beautiful words for your darkest spaces.

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