All Posts By:

Sahithi Malla

  • Articles, Lifestyle, Mental Health, Poem

    The Girl and The Moon

    Girl and the moon

    The Girl and The Moon

    There was a girl

    Standing at the edge of the river, 

    looking at the ripples that cast shadows on the sun.

    She wore a sweater that unraveled 

    with every breath and her jeans were tightly stitched.

    Her hair was pale and her mouth was thin, pressed shut with all the things 

    she just wants to scream.

    She went fishing often but never used any bait just

    the needle and pierced through all the plastic just

    bobbing along and kept them 

    so they wouldn’t tie themselves to a passing fish.

    She had ink on her fingers and smudges on her glasses 

    she said they helped her see clearer.

    She was graceful and her 

    voice was dreamy—except for when it wasn’t

    when she ran towards a group of boys—

    Loose jeans and baggy shirts 

    who were cornering a girl, or

    when a small boy fell right

    in front of her, face bruised and

    dripping red, no then

    then she puffed up, stalked like a tiger, voice like a knife

    She is stretched thin, always running and 

    at night, she is curled up in her window

    the fractured reflection staring 

    at her and she whispers

    “I’d like to go to the moon, it’s

    gravity, or lack, would send me 

    high” and she falls asleep, cheek squished against

    glass and the moon’s light threading through her hair.