he was always the first
on the job
and the last to leave
silent guy
that's why I liked him
There were nine of us
and we had to move
furniture and
garden decorations
and other stuff for people
who changed their address
it was heavy physical labor
alright
so it's just normal to
sweat and stink
but he was on another level
I mean, the rest of us
we went home at the
end of the day and
we took showers
He slept in the
car
And I asked the others
why the hell did
he sleep in his car
when he lived in a big house
with his wife and
a little kid
and at first they didn't
reply
and the second time
I asked
which was much later
they told me
he doesn't go home
because there's his
wife and kid there
I was still too young
to get it
It takes a certain amount
of living life
to understand such things
I was nineteen back then
but sure didn't feel
like an adult
Actually,
I don't feel like an adult
today either
I'm just old enough
to understand why
he refused to go
home
and chose to sleep
in his car
It wasn't from him or
any of our colleagues
but one day I just came
across the saying,
'the heart once broken
can never, ever...'
and it just ends like
that.
The heart once broken can
never, ever...
Now everything makes a bit
more sense,
doesn't it?
and even if it doesn't
it makes you
want to leave things
as they are
for to seek to uncover the
world's mysteries is
to disturb the balance
of beauty
Just allow the world
to be what it will
and observe
but don't interfere
the sooner you
learn this lesson
the better
Many thanks to LatinosUSA āEnglish edition for featuring my poem, "the heart once broken"!
Check it outĀ HERE!

Thank you!

We’re always learning (hopefully!).
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Źć£ā¢ į“„ ⢠Źć£ Agreed!
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Ooof. Love this.
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Thank you! (^_^)
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Thereās a quiet ache running through this piece, the kind that comes from seeing more of life than you meant to. The way you describe that man-silent, steady, showing up even when his heart was clearly somewhere else, feels incredibly human. Sometimes the heaviest stories are the ones people never speak aloud, the ones we only begin to understand years later when life has added a few cracks of its own to our chest.
That unfinished sentence, āthe heart once broken can never, everā¦ā is such a powerful reflection of how grief works. Some hurts donāt give us clean endings; they just linger in the background and shape the way we move through the world. But I think thereās something quietly compassionate in the way you wrote this. It reminds us to hold space for peopleās hidden battles, to recognize that pain often lives behind choices that donāt make sense from the outside.
Your final thought about letting the world be what it will carries a kind of weary wisdom. And maybe thatās part of the beauty here: learning to observe with softer eyes, to understand without prying, and to offer grace even where we have no answers. This piece sits heavy, but in a way that invites empathy rather than judgment. Thank you for sharing something that reminds us to look a little deeper at the stories being lived around us.
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(ć¤ā§Ļā§)㤠Thank you for checking it out, Kimberly!
Much appreciated! š
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This is so poignant. Just wonderful ā¤ļø
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Thank you so much! (^_^)
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