Poets logo

Granite Stillness

Tyler

By Archery Owl Published about a month ago 1 min read
Granite Stillness
Photo by Raimund Schlager on Unsplash

Some days, I want to be as still as granite.

Like the stone countertops Mom once admired but couldn’t afford.

I don't want to worry or to feel.

I don't want to wrestle with this racing mind,

because feeling too much, too fast, causes heartbreak.

I wish I could switch off the noise in my chest,

To stand like a statue: impassive, observing.

To be utterly silent.

Not just in speech, but silent in the canyons of my skull,

Where "what-ifs" carve their endless paths,

Where every thought is a river of emotional vibration.

When I was nine, I cried because I lost my best friend.

Tyler’s family moved to North Carolina.

But he never cried. He just shrugged his shoulders and looked away.

I thought that made him stronger, better than me.

And then there was a void.

Where we had once ridden bikes, where we had laughed,

there was loneliness and sadness.

He was the first boy I wanted to kiss.

Not in a romantic way, but with the same desperate urge that draws young boys to light firecrackers.

He was older. He had kissed girls and even had a girlfriend—once.

(Or so he said.)

I was jealous and in awe.

I remember the summer sun on his blonde hair and the pull of his deep blue eyes.

We spent hours swimming and afternoons wrestling on the trampoline in his backyard.

I remember how he bragged about his sister and her college friends.

Things I didn’t yet understand.

I remember that one night, when he found his dad’s gun and pushed it against my chest,

Tyler’s hand steady and careless.

I cried.

And he laughed until he realized he had done something wrong.

He looked at me with empathy and regret.

And I pretended I was okay.

I didn't want to be too emotional.

Too much.

Now, years later, I still have a void.

It breathes.

Alive and dead at the same time,

With Tyler’s careless hand pressed

against the place where fear became a habit.

The place I learned to call my stillness.

And I have never once been still enough.

Free VerseStream of Consciousness

About the Creator

Archery Owl

Anchored by my twins and the beautiful chaos we share. You can sometimes find me chasing a new horizon with a backpack or just lost in a book beneath a wide-reaching oak.

Telegram: @archeryowl

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments (1)

Archery Owl is not accepting comments at the moment
Want to show your support? Send them a one-off tip.

Find us on social media

Miscellaneous links

  • Explore
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Support

© 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.