When I fall asleep by Jessica Lyon-Wall

When I fall asleep by Jessica Lyon-Wall

Author: Maggie Devers September 19, 2025 Duration: 2:49

When I fall asleep

by Jessica Lyon-Wall

I was 12 when they brought me back.
The process
Was a slow one, over a year I went unnoticed,
Pale, thin, and guzzling
My brother's juice in secret.

One day I went to sleep
And didn't wake up.
I don't know how I got there,
But I remember some bright lights.
Then starched sheets and my teddy,
The wires in my hair.
They said I had been gone 3 days,
Link up my machines, I could be an industry!

(This is perhaps a story I should never tell)

I'd find my mum in the medicine room, practicing,
Stabbing citrus again,
But oranges don't bruise and satsumas
Don't feel pain.

The needles got shorter, the technology refined.
They were ever sure
They would fix the biology in my lifetime,
And find a decent cure.

I am fearful, and alone with it.
That is how it feels.
And if I do sleep, I have the dreams.

I settle down, I pull the duvet up,
Turn the lamp off, I wonder what my night will bring,
Whether my body is done,
If the morning will come.
Or if it will blossom
Into the perfect combination
Of sugar and hormones,
A day I've never seen before.
At the clocks twelfth strike,
Now the sun glows
Like corridor lights.

How I live is this-
And this is what it's like.

More from Jessica Lyon-Wall ↓


Mentioned in this episode:

Write After: National Poetry Month with One Poem Only

Write After is a way to encourage poets to listen and write, and use National Poetry Month to highlight how listening to poetry makes us better poets. I know I write the best when I’m surrounded by beautiful poetry–it’s part of the reason I created this podcast, and I want to encourage others to share this practice. We'll get started in April. You can share to #WriteAfterOPO.

#WriteAfterOPO


Each day, One Poem Only offers a brief, deliberate pause. Hosted by Maggie Devers, this podcast is built on a simple, consistent premise: a single poem, read aloud, without analysis or introduction. It’s an audio space where the words themselves are the event, a performance meant to be absorbed in the few minutes it takes to hear it. The daily rhythm of the show creates a quiet ritual, a point of reflection woven into a busy life. You might hear a classic sonnet, a piece of modern free verse, or a work from a poet you’ve never encountered. The selection is varied, touching on themes from the natural world to the intricacies of human emotion, always leaving room for your own interpretation. The effect is cumulative; listening regularly becomes a subtle form of education in the sound and scope of poetry, and a small act of self-care. This isn't a lecture or a book club, but a performing art delivered directly to your ears. Maggie’s clear, thoughtful readings provide the only framework needed, allowing each poem to stand entirely on its own. The curtain falls, and the moment passes, but the podcast invites you to return tomorrow when a new piece takes center stage, offering another quiet moment, one poem only.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 355

One Poem Only
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