Saturday, September 30, 2017

3 Haiku Poems

Haiku prompt "storm":

By Emily Thrasher, 2014


poems poem poetry blog blogsHail and rain down pour

Gloomy as ever before

Hear the thunder roar




poems poem poetry blog blogs


Sleet and drizzle falls

Icy cold wind assaults me

Snow piles up outside







poems poem poetry blog blogsDestruction is here

Gusts blow fiercely around me

Tornado touch down







Thanks for reading! 


Friday, September 29, 2017

The Sea of Tears

By Emily Thrasher, 2014


poems poem poetry blog blogs
Drowning in a sea of tears
Trying to escape from all my fears
The worry that haunts my dreams
Making my feelings go to extremes

We can’t fight what pulls us down
poems poem poetry blog blogsRapid riptide water threatens to drown
Whipping around a whirlpool of waves
The flood we’re in makes us slaves


Master of misery is where my soul rests
Dreadful amount of time before this ingests
Meager negotiations, feels like your clowning
poems poem poetry blog blogsDespite my desperation and endless frowning

Floating and splashing, along for the ride
I will go down in this terrible tide  
Until my last breath I will fight the undertow
If I drown, only then will I let you go


Tormenting Heartache

By Emily Thrasher, 2015

poems poem poetry blog blogs
My soul screams out in torment
While endlessly stuck in lament
Blame is justifiably mine alone
Not something you can condone

poems poem poetry blog blogs


I don’t know how to be strong
When all this time I’ve been wrong
Like a tornado destroying my reality
Sorrow sets in with brutality

poems poem poetry blog blogs


Desperately wishing it’s not real
Unbearable sadness is hard to feel
My mind drifts thinking about the past
Seems like nothing can truly last

poems poem poetry blog blogs

There’s a heavy pain in my chest
Somewhere deep below my breast
Breathing is harder than before
The truth is tough to ignore



Thursday, September 7, 2017

Set Fire to those Memories

By Emily Thrasher

I never saw it coming and I would never have guessed it would have happened the way it did. Shocked and in dismay, my heart stopped beating and shattered into thousands of tiny pieces.

The day he told me he didn’t love me anymore.

My heart was in the palm of his hands and he crushed it into the tiniest pieces a heart can be broken into. I had to leave immediately, because I couldn’t hold back the tears. I left it all and just drove away.

Going back, to get my things, has brought back so many memories. Walking through that house and then to the closet, to get my clothing, felt as though I was tip toeing around, trying to miss all the land mines that would blow up in my mind.

I had to sit down and let the tears fall from my cheeks. Just looking at all those shirts, skirts, and dresses, hanging there just the way I left them, I knew instantly there’s no passion left in my heart to wear some of these ever again.

With each dress or shirt or even shoes, there’s a vividly real memory and grief is the only response. Sorrow for what could have been and many tears fall for the loss of what once was.

There’s that beautiful blue party dress with the black lace trim around the edges. I remember the dress was itchy, but showed off my long, long legs. I never liked it much, but I knew the way I looked in it was like a shining star.

He had the biggest smile on his face when I came down the stairs ready to go to his brother’s wedding. The look in his eyes… It made me feel on top of the world, like I was the most beautiful woman he had ever seen.

My favorite sneakers look so tattered and dirty now. They are the most comfortable shoes, but you would never know it looking at them. The soul on the right foot is so worn down that it looks as though it may fall off the rest of the shoe at any moment.

Worn out, tired, and ready to be thrown away…This is the way I felt that sad and distressing day. These shoes reminded me of that dreadful feeling of worthlessness.

The dried on dirt all over this pair of shoes is from that one weekend last fall, when he helped me in the garden pulling weeds. That day was so fun. I remember that it ended with playfully throwing the straggly weeds at each other. Then he pulled me in for sweet romantic kisses.

Of course, there are those shiny silver sandals that I had on during our vacation to Mexico. I remember feeling the soft warm sand between my toes while holding his hand walking along the beach. Then there’s the swim suit I wore while we parasailed over that vast sparkling ocean.

And in the back of the closet, in a box, was the long romantically red maxi dress I wore on our first date and those platforms that made me trip and fall right into his arms.

Realizing all these clothes will continue to bring up all those wonderfully painful memories and only make me cry, I decided there was only one thing left to do. I gathered up all those memories and put them in a metal trash can, poured lighter fluid all over them.


I set the memories of love ablaze late that January day. I walked away with my head held high as the last tear fell from my eyes. Not looking back, I felt content letting go of the past.

The Friend in Africa

Joan turned 38 this year and dreads the idea of turning 40. She’s never been married and has no kids. She has 2 cats and stays busy with work. Joan works overtime most weeks as the head nurse in the Emergency Room at the local hospital. She doesn’t have many outside-of-work friends even though she is well liked at work.
Although, she has one friend from high school that she keeps in contact with through chatting online. Frank is his name and he lives on the other side of the world doing missionary work in Africa. Joan likes to send him pictures of her cats and the cute things they do. And Frank sends pictures of the wildlife and animals. Joan adores every picture he sends.
Joan had been waiting for Frank to be online for more than two weeks and she hadn’t gotten a letter from him either. In his last letter, Frank told Joan he wouldn’t be able to be online to chat for a few days. He told her not to worry about him that he was going to a more remote part of the forest to a village where a pregnant woman was having complications.
While Joan was trying not to worry, she couldn’t help herself and she googled about the country Frank was in and tried to learn how safe he was there. This definitely wasn’t the smartest idea, because Joan became more worried when she learned that this country was in civil war right now. She became consumed with worry and couldn’t stop thinking about Frank. Joan hoped he was safe.
Joan was so worried about Frank that her work friends began asking her questions about her stressing out. One work friend even offered to take Joan out for coffee to talk after she started crying at work, but Joan didn’t think she wanted to share her friendship with Frank with another person. Maybe she was being selfish or maybe she was beginning to realize she cared about Frank more than she realized and just wanted to keep it secret.

More than a month had gone by and Joan was devastated, convinced she would never hear from Frank again. Just yesterday a coworker asked Joan to go out to dinner, but she was still thinking of Frank, even though she hadn’t heard from him in so long.
Today was a long day and Joan had just gotten home from working a double shift at the hospital. Sitting down to her dinner, she had the TV on to some comedy show when the doorbell rang. It was after 7pm, Joan wondered who would be at her house and unannounced as well. She was tired and really didn’t feel like company.
So, she walked over to her front door and yelled, “Who is it?”. But no one responded. She questioned if she should open the door, but what if it’s just the mail and a package was delivered later than normal. She decided to open the door.
Standing there as handsome as the day she met him in high school, Frank smiled and greeted Joan, “Hi, it’s so lovely to finally get to see you!”
Joan just laughed. She was so happy to see him and now know that he is safe. Frank laughed too and asked her, “Joan can I come in? I have so much I’d love to tell you about Africa and what happened in that small village deep in the forest.”
Joan bewildered by the surprise and feeling embarrassed, she said “Oh, of course! Please come in would you like some tea or coffee?”
And the two of them talked for hours. Joan told Frank about the raise she received and Frank showed her pictures of the baby he helped deliver. They just seemed to click like two old friends do. Joan was thrilled when Frank told her he had moved back now that his missionary work was finished. They laughed and grew closer with every story. The night became morning and Frank told Joan good-bye. Joan couldn’t believe she and Frank stayed up all night talking.
Over the next few months Joan and Frank continued to spend enormous amounts of time together and eventually Frank told Joan he loved her. They now live together and work at the same hospital together. Joan couldn’t be happier and no longer cares about her age. So, when she turns 40, it’s just another day.

Welcome to My World

Welcome to my new blog!

Hi, my name is Emily. I’m a single mom working full time, but I really enjoy writing! I have had other blogs before, but not one focused on Fiction Short Stories or Fiction Writing in general. I have been wanting to write short stories for some time now. 


So that's what I am going to do!

The stories and ideas for fiction that I have are fun and entertaining for me. I'm here to share my short stories with others and hopefully entertain you with my fiction short stories as well. 


Get started by clicking the links to read:
The Friend in Africa or Set Fire to those Memories


I also love to write Poetry and will be posting my poems as well!

Get started by clicking the links to read:
Tormenting Heartache or The Sea of Tears

Come back soon to read more of my posts & stories!