When the Nickname Fades
When your nickname is no longer yours—
when the syllable that once wrapped around you
like a warm scarf slips off and lies forgotten
in the drawer of strangers’ tongues—
the world, that relentless cartographer, redraws the borders
of you.
It erases the graffiti you spray on lockers,
the echo that once chased you down hallways,
the whisper that slipped between friends’ laughter
and settled in the hollow of your chest.
In that quiet, you hear the hollowed echo of a name
you never chose, a word that grew on you like ivy,
clinging to the fence of your childhood,
until a storm—an ending, a beginning—wrenched it loose.
Now you walk a street where strangers call you “you,”
where every “hey” is a blank page,
where the old nickname sits, patient, in the attic
of memory, dusted by the sigh of years.
It is not a loss, but a shedding—
a skin pulled away from a body that has learned
to breathe without the weight of a borrowed echo.
So you write new syllables on the wind,
carve fresh sounds into the night,
and let the old nickname dissolve like ink in rain,
never to belong to you again,
but forever a ghost that taught the marrow of your voice
how to sing without a label.