‎ ‎At age nine, she left
‎There I was, alone, abandoned, hurt
‎With no one to pick me and clean the dirt from the sole of my feet to the crown of my head

‎The christians advised to ask yet I found no answers
‎Somehow doors slammed in my face but they were never opened
‎”You wouldn’t understand”, Dad said, and told terrible things about whom he once saw naked
‎Behind those words, my young brain was too smart to know there were messages unread

‎Reunited after six years through very unconventional means
‎I wouldn’t go into it, nothing ear-pleasing
‎All that mattered to me was me and her
‎The world could go fuck itself, I found my mama bear

‎Sweet reuniting, bitter living
‎Didn’t understand reasons for the verbal abuses
‎Fell back into thinking and confusion
‎”This woman, no longer my mother”, sadly, my conclusion

Sought for dad‎ out of frustration
‎”You were right all along”, my stupid heart thought gladly
Classic mental manipulation, unknowingly hauling into a trap in disguise

‎Nigerians called it wahala, Ghanaians called it problem,
‎I called it stuck in the middle of the two ends of a burning tunnel

‎Eventually broke away into independence
‎Life would be hard for the start
‎Ready and determined,
“‎Very Soon” became my mantra
‎Death almost made the tag, my body well fit for a body bag

‎”Call her, she’s your mother”
‎”But she left me as a child and I didn’t feel very loved when we reunited”
‎”Your mother loves you, don’t shut her out, she can help”
‎”If this is how love is expressed, I’m not very excited”
‎But her sister never gave up

‎Courage doesn’t describe the first attempt, anxiety took over
‎Her first “hello” froze every part of my body, only my heart would beat Eminem in a rap battle
‎I still remember when I quickly hanged up
‎Awkwardness released it’s grip after the third

‎Wasn’t as smooth as Nascar or butter
‎But the smile plastered on my face after each call thereafter was that of a lover
‎We weren’t fully connected, but it was a start
‎And finding it’s way was the sweet banter of a young adult and mother

‎Late 2024, early 2025 reconnection with mother began
‎Wasn’t as awkward yet weird and not as imaginably fun
I was already off age
‎More matured and ready to again seek answers

‎She led me to them, to vindicate herself
‎Wow, this woman really went through shit
‎Those silent battles were what later erupted as fury
‎I didn’t understand then, I appreciate her now

‎Out of the blue, the woman who once had no place in my heart is now my best friend, my lover, my all
‎Didn’t really feel loved as a infant, yet though an adult, I feel as a child.

‎She was just my Birth-Giver,
Now, my Best Friend Forever.
‎Currently helping me fight my battles,
And having a new mantra- HAKUNA MATATA



‎Casper
‎The friendly ghost
‎0243197002

By Grande

4 thoughts on “BIRTH-GIVER TO BESTFRIEND. (A LIFE STORY)”
    1. This poem was written for me because I feel soo connected, I feel like the writer in there because just like him, that’s my life, never had my real mom since birth. Great masterpiece. I love it.

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