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No-one learns to sail without first lifting the anchor

For Instructions for a feeling

By Hannah MoorePublished 14 days ago β€’ 1 min read
Runner-Up in Instructions for a Feeling Challenge
No-one learns to sail without first lifting the anchor
Photo by Alfonso Escu on Unsplash

I know, you want to turn away,

For me to teach you how

To make walls so thick that pain accumulates

Like leaves, decomposing in the external shadow.

But detritus banks, in time,

Compost feeds,

And no wall cannot be breached and still let in the peddlers,

To trade in fruits and grain and trinkets to bring delight.

I know you want to numb the wound,

For me to offer a salve,

That could turn an arm to deadweight,

Force your tongue to lie limp in your mouth.

But how would you speak?

How would you hold another’s hand?

How would you labour to sow, to tend, to harvest?

How would you sing?

I have no salve, no block, no trick

To smooth the sea to glassy calm,

No spell to dissipate cumulonimbus,

Which gather to darken your path.

But you are practiced in building boats

And despite the queasy rolling,

Some seas can be sailed without sight of stars,

If you keep true to your compass.

I know there is an easy way,

Where numb hands pile jagged stones

To form a makeshift harbour wall,

So you can huddle bleeding and alone,

Uselessly braced for each drenching high wave,

Self captivated by the cycle

Of shoddy repairs and scar tissue,

Ruptured by repetition of the wound.

I know you are afraid

That your back is too weak for the wind,

That you will take on water you cannot bail,

That you must go alone.

But you cannot learn to sail without first lifting the anchor.

Trust your back, know it can bend without breaking.

Trust your boat, know that it can dip without sinking.

Trust the bearing of your compass.

I know there is another way,

Where hands grow strong on salty lines,

And the tongue learns to sing pain and pleasure without shame,

And people on harbours built by villages, together,

Will hear you call

And reach to catch the rope you throw ashore,

And you will gain your sea-legs, and stand upon your prow,

And find you know yourself to be courageous.

how to

About the Creator

Hannah Moore

Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

Top insights

  1. Compelling and original writing

    Creative use of language & vocab

  2. Easy to read and follow

    Well-structured & engaging content

  3. Heartfelt and relatable

    The story invoked strong personal emotions

  1. Masterful proofreading

    Zero grammar & spelling mistakes

  2. On-point and relevant

    Writing reflected the title & theme

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Comments (17)

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  • Teresa Renton2 days ago

    Love this poem as a metaphor! Congratulations on your placement Hannah πŸ‘

  • Wooohooooo congratulations on your win! πŸŽ‰πŸ’–πŸŽŠπŸŽ‰πŸ’–πŸŽŠ

  • The Dani Writer5 days ago

    Congrats for making the leaderboard! πŸŽ‰

  • Sara Wilson5 days ago

    Congrats!! πŸŽ‰πŸ₯³

  • Matthew J. Fromm10 days ago

    Wonderful as always Hannah

  • This is a very motivating poem on new beginnings and all of the apprehension that one can have to try something new.

  • Congratulations on your Top Story🎊

  • Hazrat Umer12 days ago

    πŸ‘

  • Back to say congratulations on your Top Story! πŸŽ‰πŸ’–πŸŽŠπŸŽ‰πŸ’–πŸŽŠ

  • The Dani Writer12 days ago

    Oh my STARS! What a fitting and perfect analogy. Absolutely stunning read, Hannah! Well done, Top Storyan!

  • Oooo, sea-legs, that's so brilliant! Loved your poem!

  • Dylan 14 days ago

    Excellent poem!

  • Lamar Wiggins14 days ago

    Beautiful work. It wasn’t forceful but more revelatory and reassuring. Best of luck, Hannah!

  • Some wonderful observational life thoughts in your words

  • Caitlin Charlton14 days ago

    ❀️❀️That sad, quiet first line sounded so lived in; it is a voice developed so well that it invites the reader in without a shake. Your use of asyndeton in "detritus banks, compost feeds" slowed the pace in such a meditative way that the words really hung in the air.

  • YES >> And you will gain your sea-legs, and stand upon your prow, And find you know yourself to be courageous.

  • Power to you

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