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1.5k · May 26
Wedding Coffee
Saro May 26
I was sitting at a table in a café when she walked in.

I said, “Hey, good-looking stranger— would you like a cup of coffee?”

We were laughing, drinking coffee—

when suddenly, she caressed me.

We were heading straight to the wedding—

then I woke up, needing coffee.
64 · Jun 4
The Thief
Saro Jun 4
Time doesn’t knock.
It slips in —
quiet as dusk,
loud as regret.

It won’t ask
if you’re ready to leave childhood behind,
or if that kiss meant more than it should’ve.
It just moves —
forward,
always forward,
like a train that forgot how to brake.

You blink,
and someone’s a stranger.
You breathe,
and something's changed.
You fall asleep,
and your dreams are already late.

They say time heals.
Maybe.
But only after it ruins.
Only after it erases names
from your memory
like chalk on rain-soaked sidewalks.

Time teaches —
with scars,
with silence,
with the weight of could’ve been.

And yet,
you beg for more of it.
You barter hours for meaning.
You chase it
like running was never its nature.

But time always runs.
It outpaces youth,
eludes love,
surpasses you.

Still,
you hold out your hands,
as if you could catch it.
As if it was ever yours to keep.
Saro May 30
They liked the first.
I didn’t expect it —
but now I expect myself to do it again.

It’s never easy,
the second time.

What if it flops?
What if the first was luck,
and everything after is proof?

So here’s one —
just to get it over with.
A second breath
after the first gasp.
I’ve read so many poems on this site and honestly, it just made me feel worse.
“Wedding Coffee” was my reason for making this account. It blew up, and now I’m scared it was a one-hit wonder.
I know I can’t compete with that straight away… but this poem isn’t about being better. It’s just to help with the stress of a second poem trying to live up to the first.
46 · Jun 6
Perm
Saro Jun 6
We had stopped —
debating lunch,
voices overlapping in a blur
I wasn’t part of.

I saw her before it happened.
In her own group,
talking, laughing,
alive in her own world.

I noticed her then.
Didn’t think she noticed me.

We started walking again,
when I caught her gaze —
already locked on me.
I turned once.
Twice.
Three times, fast —
as if the air had folded wrong.

Still, she stared,
eyes didn’t flinch.
Like she knew me.
Or like my hair held a secret
she’d solve.

“Where’d you get your perm from?”
she asked.

I blinked.
“…I don’t have one.”

She tilted her head.
“It’s natural.”
She said it like a spell—
making us nod in succession.

I kept walking.
But something tugged at me.
So I turned around —
to say thank you, maybe.
Or something else.

But she was gone.

That was it.
A blink.
A glitch.
A ripple in the script.

It wasn’t love.
Not even close.
Just a moment —
quick, strange, unshakable.

No name.
No number.
No reason to remember it.

But I do.

A stranger
who saw me
when I wasn’t trying to be seen.
Saro Jun 11
Who are you to decide what you deserve?
Without His will,
a leaf won’t fall.
Your lungs won’t move.
You don’t choose—
you’re allowed.

He raises the guilty,
strikes down the proud,
plucks kings like petals,
tears down empires like paper.
He forgives monsters,
forgets saints.
He decides. Not you.

You cry justice—
but what do you know of mercy?
You say you’re too far gone—
but what do you know of distance?

He speaks, and oceans part.
You breathe because He allows it.
You think you know justice,
but you don’t even understand grace.

So plead.
Repent.
Curse yourself, if you must.
Scream your truths into silence.

But don’t pretend you’re the judge.
Tried writing from a perspective that isn't mine. Fun
24 · 1d
Superficial
Saro 1d
I won’t pretend it was anything more.
It was looks. Just looks.
Shallow? Sure.
But **** — sometimes that’s enough.

The top wrapped around her torso,
tight but not loud,
just the right length, showing just enough.
That sliver of skin — her stomach…
Anyone would’ve looked.

The pants sat low on her hips,
baggy but not drowning her,
falling in that perfect accidental way.
Effortless — like she didn’t care.
But it worked.
It all worked.

The shoes were simple,
but they tied it all together.
Unassuming. Intentional.
A chain peeked from her neck,
rings scattered across her fingers —
tiny choices that made it hers.

She walked past me,
eyes down, texting.

I couldn’t help but stare.
You would’ve too.

Then she looked up.
Caught me.

A quick smile.
Not flirtatious. Not shy.
Just... there.

And then she was gone.

I kept walking.
But it stuck.

Not her name.
Not her voice —
I didn’t even hear it.

Just the way everything fit.
Like she wasn’t trying to impress —
but ended up doing it anyway.

It wasn’t deep. It wasn’t love.
Just one of those stupid moments
that still linger.

— The End —