| «My dearest Grandma"was the way he always started the letter,
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| it wasn’t the only occasion he wrote to keep it together,
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| «Thank you for the birthday present, it’ll really come in handy
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| I’m writing quietly, 'cause I hope you’re not angry,
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| Mum and Dad are yelling at each other, like every night,
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| like every night, I end up locking my door and I write.
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| Would you please be able to visit, and maybe make 'em make up?
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| I’d hate to think that it was me that made my parents break up.
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| Next year I’ll be in high school, I’m pretty nervous, actually,
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| though I know it’s common, I don’t want no broken family.
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| It’s my fault, and I don’t like it here,
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| and it’s my fault, and now my little brother’s in tears,
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| and Gran, I hope you’re not mad, I swear I’ll try to be good,
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| 'cause Mum and Dad’ll get along much better when I’m being good»
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| signin' it, «Love, your Grandson», quietly he stored it in the cupboard
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| with the others, and tightly held his brother, he was…
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| Under pressure, I’m heating up.
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| Under pressure, calm, but it’s all front.
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| Under pressure, boiling point has come…
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| Fast forward twelve years, and he’s been out of home for seven,
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| never really understood the way he carried it all with him,
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| even years later, he hated things gettin' too heated,
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| whole section of his history he tried to delete.
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| New school, new city, reason justified his leaving,
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| he couldn’t leave his guilt seeing his mother’s spirit beaten,
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| she was bleeding, eyes streaming, he had to depart,
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| frightened sunken-eyed kid became the life of the party,
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| only been in town a term, social life like a soap star,
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| still wrote his grandmother the occasional postcard,
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| «Doin' fine, working hard», he thought that she’d be relieved,
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| and perhaps a little proud of all the things he’d achieved.
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| HDs and team captain, a prize in his class,
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| a string of love affairs, but never close enough to see the scars,
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| kept the cards to his chest, stressed to less and conflict,
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| between the lines, his Grandma, only one who heard his bomb tick, he was…
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| Under pressure, I’m heating up.
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| Under pressure, calm, but it’s all front.
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| Under pressure, boiling point has come…
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| «Child, I miss you greatly, haven’t got many letters lately,
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| I just wrote to let you know that it’s OK to show when you’re under pressure.
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| Though I never really needed to explain this is true,
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| I see a lot of your dear father when I’m looking at you.
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| He worked hard, and enjoyed inebriation,
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| and really, that’s a trait that doesn’t skip a generation.
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| Once removed, I see clearer than most, dear boy,
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| I see though your illusions, boy,
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| all life’s lessons are under pressure.»
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| Now he’s old enough to know better, looking through those old letters,
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| that he’s never sent, he’s sure the past is omnipresent,
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| he won’t resent the sum total of experience,
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| from delirious days, to some so serious.
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| «Never got those letters, but be sure that I’m hearing this».
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| They’re really just signposts, landmarks, clippings,
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| some repetitive themes, like record players skipping.
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| He has torn off the layers and always found something different
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| inside him, tiny sparks like stars colliding,
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| and they let him live again, he’s never giving in,
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| and without those few friends that always meant well,
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| it might have never got to «all's well that ends well»,
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| pen fell, swiftly, why he’s writing now is still a mystery,
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| has the feeling history forgotten tends to repeat,
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| so some nights before sleep, he writes to keep it in his sights,
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| and when it’s close enough to touch, he lets fly,
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| just to get by, by any means, to walk the path of many dreams,
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| the penny seems to fall at the very last moment,
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| the ability to love is like the vast ocean,
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| and with lead-lidded focus, he writes the last lines of this one,
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| and signs off, «With love, your Grandson». |