Meet Me in My Words:

Why I Write to You Every Morning

Every morning, I write something new — sometimes soft, sometimes sharp, always true. The poems arrive before the world wakes: small attempts at making sense of being human, stitched together with metaphors and caffeine.

When you subscribe, that day’s poem finds you first — landing in your inbox every single morning at 7:11AM. No scrolling, no noise, no algorithms. Just words waiting quietly for you, reminding you to pause, to breathe, to feel.

Think of it as a shared ritual: one poem, one breath, one moment of belonging before the day begins.

And if you’d like to linger a while, you can meet me in my words below. 🌿

You Only Love My Yes
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

You Only Love My Yes

There’s a peculiar grief that comes from realizing someone never loved you—they loved the version of you that made them comfortable. The agreeable one. The one who said yes instead of asking why. You Only Love My Yes is about that moment of clarity that feels like heartbreak and rebirth at once—the recognition that some kinds of love are just mirrors, reflecting back obedience instead of intimacy. It’s about how saying no—finally, painfully—can sound like loss, but is really the first honest thing you’ve said in years.💚

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Exploring the Caves of Sorrow
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Exploring the Caves of Sorrow

There is a certain kind of courage that never looks like courage at all. It isn’t loud or visible or triumphant. It’s the quiet decision to turn toward what hurts instead of away from it—to enter the shadowed places of the self and sit beside the sorrow we spend our lives avoiding. Exploring the Caves of Sorrow is an elegy for that descent: the slow, necessary unearthing of our unhappiness. It’s about the radical act of feeling what we’re taught to repress, about learning that sadness is not a symptom of failure but evidence of depth. To confront sorrow is to confront our own aliveness—to recognize that grief, longing, and despair are not opposites of joy, but its proof.💚

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You Are So Mean
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

You Are So Mean

Some people choose cruelty like it's a second skin. No matter how many chances they’re given to show kindness, they twist every opportunity into something sharp. You Are So Mean traces the slow erosion of feeling that happens when you’re hurt over and over again by someone who refuses to change. It begins in pain, moves through disappointment, frustration, and fury—and ends not in forgiveness, but in freedom. Because eventually, you stop expecting softness. Eventually, you stop letting it touch you. This poem is for anyone who has ever outgrown the grip of someone else's cruelty—and found peace in letting go.💚

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Inheritance Tax
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Inheritance Tax

Every family leaves something behind. Some inherit silver, others silence. Some receive heirlooms, others harm. This poem imagines the legacy of cruelty as a legal document — a sterile record of emotional debt, cataloguing the damage passed from one generation to the next. It treats pain as property, remorse as liability, and survival as the only form of payment left. Beneath its procedural language lies a simple truth: when love fails its duty, what remains is not inheritance, but cleanup.💚

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Rot and Root
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Rot and Root

Some people are born into gardens that never wanted them to grow. Places where love is conditional, success is an affront, and every attempt to rise is met with the slow, deliberate tightening of roots determined to keep you buried. This poem is about what it means to come from that kind of soil—to fight your way toward light while the very ground beneath you tries to pull you back under. It’s about the violence of outgrowing your origins, the grief of leaving them behind, and the sacred act of blooming anyway.💚

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The Agent of Chaos
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

The Agent of Chaos

Some people don’t seek peace, they seek impact—any kind. They thrive in discord, mistaking the chaos they create for proof that they matter. The agent of chaos is a particular kind of creature: unpredictable, unmoored, and terrifyingly inventive in their cruelty. You can’t prepare for them, because conscience has limits and they have none. Yet even they cannot outrun the inevitable truth that no matter how much destruction they sow, people eventually leave. And when the dust settles, they’re left alone with the echo of their own ruin, confusing it still for power.💚

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When She Goes Quiet
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

When She Goes Quiet

There is a particular kind of silence that isn’t peace, but surrender—the quiet that comes after a woman has spent years fighting to be heard, understood, or treated with care. It happens in marriages, friendships, families, workplaces—the slow erosion of her spirit mistaken for calm. This poem is about that silence. About what it costs a woman to finally stop fighting, and the haunting beauty of her stillness when she does. It’s not weakness. It’s the sound of someone reclaiming her last, unbroken piece of self.💚

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Cadillac Ranch
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Cadillac Ranch

There are songs that belong to people more than they ever belonged to the radio. Cadillac Ranch is one of those for me. Every time it plays, I’m transported back to a different version of us—the one before distance and disappointment rewrote the map. This poem isn’t really about a car or a song, but about how something as simple as a few chords can summon an entire lifetime: the hope we built, the heartbreak that followed, and the haunting persistence of memory. Sometimes the only way to survive what’s gone is to keep writing it down, over and over, until the ache feels like art.💚

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The Creature That Never Changed
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

The Creature That Never Changed

This poem is about false transformation—the kind that masquerades as growth but is really just reinvention of the same harm. The Creature That Never Changed is a study in deceit: a being that sheds its skin not to evolve, but to disguise its rot. It’s about the predators who adapt only their masks, who mimic remorse and redemption while continuing to consume. The world often mistakes shedding for change, but this poem is a reminder that some creatures don’t evolve—they simply learn to hide their hunger more beautifully. 💚

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Where My Heart Rests
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Where My Heart Rests

This poem is about peace—the kind that comes when love stops feeling like uncertainty and starts feeling like home. Where My Heart Rests is for the person who quiets the noise, who loves not just the easy parts but the scarred and trembling ones too. It’s about the rare kind of love that doesn’t demand transformation, only presence. The kind of love that feels like a hand reaching through the chaos to remind you that you are safe, seen, and exactly where you’re meant to be. It’s about him—and the grace of finally arriving somewhere that feels like forever. 💚

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I Get to Call You Home
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

I Get to Call You Home

This poem is about the kind of love that feels like exhale after years of holding your breath. I Get to Call You Home is for the person who steadies the world just by standing in it—the one whose laughter softens the hard edges of every day. It’s about finding safety not in walls or places, but in a person. The kind of love that doesn’t need grand declarations to be extraordinary because its power is in its peace. It’s about the simple, staggering miracle of finding your home in someone’s heart—and getting to stay there. 💚

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There Is Still Good in the World?
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

There Is Still Good in the World?

Some poems are written from the centre of survival—the quiet aftermath where you’re trying to remember what it feels like to believe in light again. There Is Still Good in the World? is about that search. It’s about what happens when cruelty tries to shrink your world to the size of your pain, and how—slowly, stubbornly—you begin to find small proofs of beauty again. A loaf of bread rising. A song that still reaches you. A heartbeat that still belongs to you. It’s a question, yes—but one that ends with breath.💚

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You Won (I Think I’m Dying Here)
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

You Won (I Think I’m Dying Here)

Some poems come from a place beyond words — from the hollow where endurance turns into silence. You Won (I Think I’m Dying Here) is one of those. It’s about what happens when cruelty becomes a constant presence, when the act of surviving starts to feel like burning. It isn’t a poem of surrender, but of truth — the kind that hurts to name, the kind that lives in the space between fading and fighting.💚

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Blood in the Water
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Blood in the Water

This poem is about the moment cruelty becomes contagious—the way abusers and enablers circle when they sense vulnerability, each taking their bite and calling it righteousness. Blood in the Water uses the metaphor of a feeding frenzy to explore how pain draws predators, and how survival becomes an act of defiance. It’s about what remains after the attack—the bone-deep resilience of someone who refuses to drown. Even when the water runs red, even when everything that can be torn is gone, what’s left still rises to the surface.💚

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What I Remember
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

What I Remember

This poem is about memory—the kind that doesn’t play like a film but lingers like smoke. What I Remember came from the realisation that trauma doesn’t archive moments; it archives sensations. I don’t remember the exact words, the order of events, or the arguments that undid me—but I remember the ache, the confusion, the slow erosion of self. It’s about how narcissistic abuse and coercive control don’t just take your peace; they rewrite your perception. And yet, somehow, in the blur of it all, you survive. You rebuild. You remember yourself, even when you can’t remember what happened. 💚

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The Corrosive Touch
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

The Corrosive Touch

This poem is a warning disguised as a story. The Corrosive Touch is about the kind of person who ruins quietly—the ones who don’t destroy with fire or fury, but with erosion. It’s about the subtle decay that begins when someone’s charm starts to taste like control, when affection feels like diminishment. Some people don’t burn what they touch—they corrode it, slowly, invisibly, until what’s left no longer remembers its own shine. This poem is for everyone who has mistaken corrosion for love. 💚

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Sinister
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Sinister

This poem explores the nature of evil—not the loud, cinematic kind, but the quiet, deliberate kind that hides behind charisma and imitation. Sinister is a story about what happens when two malignant souls find each other and recognise themselves at last. It’s about the rare, terrible comfort of being understood by someone who shares your darkness, and the devastation that follows when depravity stops feeling lonely. This is not a love story. It’s a mirror held up to the parts of humanity we pretend not to see.💚

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The Horror Show
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

The Horror Show

This poem is an allegory for the generational theatre of pain—the way dysfunction, cruelty, and control disguise themselves as tradition. The Horror Show is about the performance of harm, the masks we inherit, and the silent rebellion that begins the moment someone dares to step out of the script. It isn’t about any one family—it’s about all of us, about the spectacle of survival that continues until someone finally refuses to perform.💚

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You’ve Never Met Me
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

You’ve Never Met Me

This poem was written for every time someone thought they had me figured out before I ever opened my mouth. You’ve Never Met Me is about what happens when you stop letting other people define your story. It’s for anyone who has been underestimated, misjudged, or spoken for—and found strength in the silence that followed. It’s a reminder that perception is not truth, that resilience doesn’t need recognition, and that no amount of hate or assumption can break what has already learned how to endure.💚

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Unclenched Fists
Britt Wolfe Britt Wolfe

Unclenched Fists

There comes a point when holding on becomes its own kind of wound. Unclenched Fists was written for that moment—the one where love and grief blur together, where your hands ache from trying to preserve something that was never yours to keep. It’s about the slow, painful courage of release. The realisation that letting go isn’t failure—it’s freedom. And that sometimes the only way to heal is to open your hands, let the wind take what’s left, and finally feel how light you were meant to be.💚

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Poetry by Britt Wolfe

I publish a new poem every single morning. Or mourning. Depends on the emotional forecast. Some are tender. Some are rage in a nice outfit. All of them are my attempt to make sense of the human experience using metaphors, emotionally charged line breaks, and questionable coping mechanisms.

Let me be clear: these poems are fiction. Or feelings. Or both. Sometimes they’re exaggerated. Sometimes they’re the emotional equivalent of screaming into a throw pillow. Sometimes they’re just a vibe that got out of hand. They are not confessions. They are not journal entries. They are not cry-for-help-coded-messages. (I have actual coping strategies. And group chats.)

Poetry, for me, isn’t about answers. It’s about shouting into the abyss—but rhythmically. Some pieces will whisper, “Hey… you okay?” Others will show up uninvited, grab you by the collar, and scream, “SAME.” They’re moody, messy, and occasionally helpful—kind of like me.

You’ll find themes running through them like recurring nightmares or that one playlist you swear you’ve moved on from. Love. Grief. Identity. Joy. Ruin. It’s all here, jostling for attention like emotionally unstable toddlers on a sugar high.

Think of these poems as an ongoing conversation—one I started, overshared during, and have now awkwardly walked away from. Good luck with that.