I take trazodone to sleep.
Fifty milligrams.
Without it my mind replays
the arguments that ended our marriage.
You told me I was the problem.
You said it enough
that I believed it.
I went to therapy.
I took the pills.
I lay on the floor of the room
that used to be ours
and tried to understand
what was wrong with me.
But I was not the only one causing harm.
You treated every conversation
as a place to prove you were right.
Being right became more important
than being kind.
We both did damage.
Neither of us won.
There is no winning
when a marriage ends
and the children
stand in the middle of it.
I see my kids on a schedule now.
I am not their father
the way I was.
I am a visitor.
They are guests
in whatever room I rent.
This is the truth
that breaks my voice:
the bitterness between us
reached them.
It did not stay between us.
It never does.
I wanted to fight
for what I believed was right.
But the fighting itself
became the harm.
I could not stop.
Neither could you.
You said reconciliation was possible.
I could return
or walk away.
But I will never be free of this.
My anger hurt my children.
And I have to live with that.
About the Creator
Pixel Floyd
I write poetry. Inspired by the undefined spaces where words take their chances.


Comments (1)
So bittersweet; so real. I was both the child and the wife/mother in this poem. When I look back, I know the greatest healing that we can give to our children is our own healing and happiness. May you find a place of joy ;-)