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Michael Drummond's avatar

I agree, we grow much like a tree, which is often a typewriter. Good job!

Adrião Pereira da Cunha's avatar

The poem feels like someone trying to understand the quiet miracle of becoming themselves, step by trembling step. There is a tenderness in the way the speaker looks at their own body, as if learning to inhabit it were an act of courage. The father’s presence lingers softly, not as a demand but as a hope, a small light carried across years and continents. The images forests, pools, suitcases, the vast cashew tree feel like emotional shelters, places where memory still knows how to breathe. What moves me most is the sense of a young person holding their past gently, trying to honour it without being trapped by it. At twenty‑five, the world feels both enormous and intimate, full of things that grow whether we’re ready or not. The longing for roots echoes through every line, even as the speaker keeps moving. Childhood shade becomes a place the adult self still seeks in moments of uncertainty. And beneath everything, there is a quiet insistence on continuing, on growing despite imperfect light. It reads like a soft, human affirmation that becoming is its own kind of bravery.

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