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I Mourn

  I mourn children

  I chose not to have.

  Not because my body failed me,

  not because fate slammed a door,

  but because I refused to open it.

  Because I’ve seen this world —

  its teeth, its hunger,

  its way of chewing through innocence

  and spitting out something tired

  and lonely

  and still expected to smile.

  People talk about life

  like it’s a gift,

  a golden ticket,

  a miracle souls stand in line for.

  But I remember too much.

  I’ve lived too many cycles.

  I know what it costs to come here.

  The amnesia is mercy,

  not mystery.

  I cannot ask someone

  to walk into this place

  blindfolded

  because I wanted to feel whole,

  or praised,

  or needed.

  I do not want to carve myself open

  and offer my child

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  a piece of my soul

  just so I can be dragged back here again

  in another life,

  another body,

  another round of lessons

  I never asked to learn.

  I mourn them anyway —

  the ones who never took their first breath,

  the ones who never asked me to be their mother,

  the ones whose names soften

  like fog around my heart.

  I picture them sometimes:

  shadows of futures I turned away from,

  little spirits waiting in some cosmic hallway,

  wondering if I’ll ever call them down.

  And the strangest part is —

  I love them,

  these children I will never meet.

  I love them enough

  to spare them.

  I love them enough

  to break the cycle

  instead of binding them to it.

  But love doesn’t stop grief.

  It never has.

  So I sit with the ache

  of what might’ve been,

  letting the sadness bloom and fade

  like a bruise in my chest.

  This is my quiet mourning:

  not for lost potential,

  but for a lineage

  I chose to end,

  for a future

  I refused to birth,

  for souls I sent back home

  with gentleness

  instead of dragging them

  into the violence of living.

  Maybe that is motherhood too —

  a choice not to create

  what you cannot bear to see suffer.

  And maybe in another universe,

  I held them.

  And maybe in this one,

  I loved them enough

  not to.

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