The Bystanders

The Bystanders poem by Britt Wolfe author

Read more poetry by Britt Wolfe

Violence rarely enters a room alone.

It arrives accompanied by silence.

A fist rises.

A voice hardens.

A child learns to read danger
in the shifting weather of a face.

And somewhere nearby,
someone notices.

Someone hears the crack in a voice.

The apology that comes too quickly.

The laugh that sounds rehearsed.

The fear hiding behind careful eyes.

Someone knows.

Not everything.

Enough.

Enough to feel the wrongness settle in the bones.

Enough to look away.

The bystander is rarely cruel.

That is what makes the role so dangerous.

Cruelty announces itself.

Silence introduces itself as reason.

It's not my place.

I don't know the whole story.

I don't want to make things worse.

And while these careful sentences are spoken,
the wound deepens.

Not because no one saw.

Because someone did.

History is full of perpetrators.

But it is also full of witnesses
who chose comfort over courage.

People who recognised the smoke
and convinced themselves
it wasn't their responsibility to ask about the fire.

The great tragedies of the world
rarely grow in darkness alone.

They grow in the long shadow
of unchallenged behaviour.

In the fertile soil of lowered eyes.

In the quiet agreement
that saying nothing is somehow neutrality.

But silence is not neutral.

A child standing alone in fear
does not experience silence as neutrality.

A person being diminished,
humiliated,
hurt,
does not experience silence as neutrality.

Silence has weight.

Silence takes sides.

Silence tells the vulnerable
exactly how alone they are.

Courage is rarely dramatic.

More often,
it is a trembling voice saying,

No.

That isn't right.

Or:

I see what is happening.

Or simply:

You are not alone.

Small words.

Ordinary words.

Yet entire lives can turn upon them.

The world does not change
only because of those willing to do harm.

It changes because of those willing to interrupt it.

To step forward.

To speak.

To risk discomfort.

To become, in one decisive moment,
the person who stayed.

Because every act of cruelty
asks the same question:

Who will stop me?

And every act of courage
answers.

Not today.

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Poetry by Britt Wolfe:

Britt Wolfe

Britt Wolfe writes emotionally devastating fiction with the precision of a heart surgeon and the recklessness of someone who definitely shouldn’t be trusted with sharp objects. Her stories explore love, loss, and the complicated mess of being human. If you enjoy books that punch you in the feelings and then politely offer you a Band-Aid, you’re in the right place.

https://bio.site/brittwolfeauthor
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