Tag: anger

  • Author’s Note

    I wrote Hot Coals for the men who’ve been told that strength is silence, and that showing emotion makes you weak. As someone who has carried fire inside themselves for a long time, I know firsthand how heavy it can be to hold anger and pain alone. Holding it like hot coals doesn’t make you stronger—it only burns you from within. Vulnerability is not weakness. It is courage. And letting yourself feel, fully, is the bravest thing you can do.


    Hand holding glowing hot coals, symbolizing the burden of suppressed anger and emotional release.
    Holding anger like hot coals scars the heart. Hot Coals by Rowan Evans explores the courage in vulnerability and the liberation of letting go.

    Hot Coals
    Poetry by Rowan Evans

    They tell you to clench your fists, hold tight—
    Let the fire burn bright, don’t let in the light.
    Anger, rage—your only currency,
    The world’s measure of your masculinity.

    But no one warned you of the burn,
    The searing pain you never learn,
    That holding anger like hot coals in hand
    Scars the heart in ways you can’t withstand.

    They say to stand tall, to never cry,
    Keep your voice low, don’t ask why.
    But the flames flicker and twist inside,
    A storm of feelings you try to hide.

    Each coal a bitter word unsaid,
    A wound you carry in your head.
    It singes, it smolders, beneath your skin,
    A quiet battle you’ll never win.

    Let go, I whisper, of this deadly fire—
    There’s more to feel, more to aspire.
    Rage will only leave you burned,
    A lesson you’ve yet to learn.

    There’s beauty in tears, in the gentle sigh,
    In love’s soft touch and the freedom to cry.
    To release the coals, let your heart unfold,
    Is the bravest thing, not a story untold.

    Feel the coolness of the rain on your face,
    The warmth of peace, of a softer grace.
    Embrace the spectrum, let it flow—
    You’re not just a vessel for anger’s glow.

    For holding on to fire won’t make you strong;
    It only burns, and for far too long.
    Set down the coals, let them fade to ash,
    And rise from the flames, free at last.


    If you’d like to explore more of my work, you can find it in The Library of Ashes.

  • Wrath ignites like wildfire. This sonnet captures the consuming power of anger and the destructive blaze of vengeance.


    Figure surrounded by storm and fire – illustration for Wrath sonnet.
    Wrath – the fifth of the 7 Deadly Sonnets by Rowan Evans, exploring fury and vengeance.

    7 Deadly Sonnets
    Wrath

    A tempest rages deep within my veins,
    A fury fierce, unyielding, set alight;
    Each heartbeat hammers, bound by blood-stained chains,
    With vengeance locked behind my teeth tonight.

    I am the storm, the howl, the broken flame,
    The lightning bolt that strikes without regret,
    And scorches all who dare to speak my name,
    As wrath consumes my heart with deadly debt.

    The taste of anger, bitter and so raw,
    A poison coiled and ready for release,
    But vengeance only feeds what hatred saw,
    A fire that neither soothes nor brings me peace.

    In wrath, I am consumed, a beast unchained,
    By fire’s touch, my soul’s forever stained.


    The 7 Deadly Sonnets

    I. Lust
    My pulse quickens at each whispered breath, desires draping the air like silken chains. ‘Lust,’ the first of the 7 Deadly Sonnets, explores the fevered, consuming hunger that blurs the lines between passion and peril.

    II. Gluttony
    ‘Gluttony’ devours more than food—it consumes the soul. The second of the 7 Deadly Sonnets explores endless craving, the hunger for excess, and the void it leaves behind.

    III. Greed
    ‘Greed’ reveals the hunger that is never sated—the clutching hands, the endless thirst for more, and the hollowness left behind. The third of the 7 Deadly Sonnets.

    IV. Sloth
    ‘Sloth’ captures the quiet paralysis of apathy, the weight of inaction, and the suffocating stillness that can consume the soul. The fourth of the 7 Deadly Sonnets.