Poem: To My Sister, Who Left Too Soon
I miss you, dear sister.
I miss you dearly.
I’ve missed being interrupted mid-sentence,
missed the snap of your voice,
the slap on my wrist when I overstepped—
your way of saying do better without saying it at all.
You were my first teacher.
No one corrects me now.
No one catches my mistakes mid-air
like you once did—
with impatience, with love,
sometimes both at once.
I miss the fights,
the slammed doors and stubborn silences.
I miss the arguments that taught me to think.
You were my mirror,
my sparring partner,
my compass.
There were days I hated you,
wished you would just disappear.
I thought the world would be quieter,
easier, without you.
But now you are gone,
and the silence is too loud.
I wish I had prayed
for a long, stubborn, beautiful life for you—
the kind that stretches into wrinkles and old jokes
and bickering over the television remote.
If love was ever sharp between us,
know this:
it was real.
It still is.
And I miss you.
Dearly.

