The scar on your knee from when you fell chasing a name.
The ache in your hands when it rains—your grandmother swore this was how ghosts touched bone.
The way your mother’s silence still sits in your chest, a house no one lives in but you refuse to leave.
The body is a story told in echoes.
A bruise fading into memory.
A ribcage tightening when you pass the street where love once held you and then let go.
You try to unlearn, to smooth over, to forget.
But the body keeps.
It remembers the weight of absence,the language of loss written in muscle and marrow.
Somewhere beneath the skin, there is still a boy who never stopped running, still a girl tracing old wounds in the mirror, still a name waiting to be spoken—not for the first time, but for the last.
Tafahri Theru Munjatta
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