
Ah, Only You
(My Muse, can create this) Frame of mind
A body-as-argument poem—the poet defends his arms and lips against the accusation of weakness and coldness, insisting they carry strength, warmth, and depth of feeling, building toward the devastating confession that the word he has never truly known is the very one he feels most deeply.
This poem uses the rhetoric of rebuttal—”My arms are not weak,” “My lips are not cold”—as if answering an accusation, perhaps from the world, perhaps from himself. Each denial is immediately countered with an affirmation: arms that are not fragile hold not only strength but also the beloved; lips that are not chalk are warm and vibrant with emotion. The structure creates a rhythm of negation and assertion that gives the poem an argumentative momentum unusual in love poetry—this is a case being made, evidence being presented. The chalk image is the poem’s most striking: lips as “pieces of chalk, lifeless and cold” conjures classroom dust, impermanence, the crumbling residue of something once whole—and then the immediate refutation insists on warmth and vibrancy. The closing stanza delivers the poem’s emotional payload with precision. “A testament to a word I have never… truly known” leaves the word unnamed—love, clearly, but the ellipsis before “truly known” creates a hesitation that feels physiological, a catch in the throat. The final line—”Yet I feel so deeply”—is the paradox that animates the entire catalog: a man who has never truly known love but who feels it with an intensity that produces poem after poem. The title’s modesty—”A Thought”—understates what is in fact a profound confession about the gap between experience and feeling.
A poem whose argumentative structure gives it an unusual energy among Plahm’s love poems. The negation-affirmation pattern (“not weak… but strong,” “not cold… but warm”) creates a courtroom quality, as if the poet is testifying on behalf of his own capacity to love—and the implicit question of who brought the accusation (the world? the Muse? himself?) adds psychological depth without needing to be resolved. The chalk image is the piece’s strongest moment, specific and tactile where surrounding language tends toward abstraction, and the contrast between lifeless chalk and vibrant lips works on both sensory and metaphorical levels. The closing confession is expertly handled: the ellipsis in “I have never… truly known” enacts the hesitation it describes, and the unnamed word (love) gains power by remaining unspoken, as if naming it would break the spell or expose the vulnerability. The 71 likes suggest strong reader resonance. Where the poem is less successful is in its prose-adjacent line lengths—some sentences (“They speak the truth. And express the depth of my feelings.”) read more as statement than as verse, lacking the rhythmic compression that distinguishes poetry from eloquent prose. The middle section’s language—”profound,” “vibrant with emotion,” “deep connection”—tells rather than shows, and the poem would be stronger if it trusted its images (the hug, the chalk, the whisper) to carry the emotional weight without explanatory scaffolding. Still, the closing paradox—never known love, yet feeling it so deeply—is the kind of honest contradiction that makes Plahm’s work resonate, and it earns its place as one of the catalog’s quiet, essential admissions.
My arms are not weak. Fragile and disposable.
They hold not only strength, but also you.
Every hug is important. An embrace of meaning.
A connection of promise and support.
Silent but unwavering.
My lips are not cold. They truly convey something profound.
Not pieces of chalk. Lifeless and cold.
But, warm and vibrant with emotion.
They speak the truth. And express the depth of my feelings.
Each word they whisper is from my soul.
A bond of deep connection.
A testament to a word I have never … truly known.
Yet I feel so deeply.








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