Still Here (But Not Really)

I walk… but it feels like the floor forgets me.

Like every step I take disappears before it lands.

I’m here—but not really here.

A shadow wearing skin,

A name with no echo,

A house with no lights on.

The world moves like a film I’ve already watched

—except now, I’m not in the cast.

I’m just glass.

People talk and their words pass through me,

not around me… through.

I laugh sometimes.

It’s hollow.

Like tapping on an empty can,

hoping for soup.

But there’s nothing in it—

never was.

I don’t cry much anymore.

Even the tears have packed their bags,

decided I wasn’t worth the water.

My heart?

It used to be an orchestra.

Now it’s just static.

A distant radio playing songs I can’t name

from a place I can’t remember.

And my soul…

my soul is like an abandoned station—

trains used to come and go,

but now the tracks are rusted,

and the ticket windows closed.

I miss feeling.

Not just the good stuff—

I’d take anything.

Pain would be proof.

Grief would be a guest.

But this…

this silence inside me is a fog that forgets

even my own name.

People say, “You’re strong.”

But strength isn’t the same as alive.

A stone is strong.

So is a tombstone.

Sometimes I stare at the ceiling

and wonder if it remembers when I cared.

When I prayed.

When I dreamed.

When I believed mornings meant something.

But I still wake up.

Still eat.

Still breathe.

Still move my mouth when I have to.

I guess that counts.

I guess I’m still here.

But not really.

Michael Forty

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