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Adrião Pereira da Cunha's avatar

The poem feels like a daughter stepping into a room where grief and love have settled into every corner.

Each scattered object becomes a small pulse of memory, refusing to be dismissed as mere clutter.

The feathers, tins, socks, calendars all of it feels like the residue of two lives that never fully let go of each other.

There’s a tenderness in the way she cannot separate what belonged to whom, as if their histories had fused in the dust.

The contrast between the trivial and the precious shows how, in a hoard, everything becomes equally sacred, equally wounded.

The honeymoon photo buried in debris lands like a quiet heartbreak, a reminder of a tenderness now swallowed by time.

The daughter’s gaze carries both overwhelm and love, as if she is inheriting emotions she never asked to hold.

The room becomes a kind of nest built from scraps chaotic, intimate, strangely protective.

The comparison to a bird feeding its young turns the mess into something painfully nurturing, a love expressed through remnants.

In the end, the poem becomes a meditation on how the traces we leave behind can still cradle those who come after us.

Kim Nelson's avatar

The magic of poetry creates a new slant on hoarding in the most compelling way.

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