Monday, October 27, 2014
Newton's Cradle
sunrise too soon and too bright, the last eclipse left its shadows. glass is shattering, cells are breaking, letters of tear stained ink, everything is moving forward without consent- no provocation. they could not hold their ground, everything is soiled in two different places at the same time. the labyrinth gives way for just a moment and another inlet appears on the other side of the obsidian walls where they meet. she does not know that he knows nothing. he does not know if she's lying. neither know the truths. the windows are still breaking but by absence, the hallow wind is unrelenting. three knocks. the door, the heart, the vacuum. there is a book and script of something they relate, loss, lost. sideways pages of secrets, he misses the thrill and mischief of anything. north has nothing but ghosts. she is full of ghosts. they are the old song, the ever living ghosts of what once was. it's the start of the end for them and neither know it. he says he will leave and he always tells her that he will stay on this bench and she will have to go to the next room. she always refused and she was right, she had to be the one to say to go. distance apart, silence sometimes fills until the next moment of idleness becomes unbearable. they want hands and teeth and vespers and are just in reach but it's like the souls in limbo. the souls in lust. so close and so far. they will not reach again. glass shatters still and he's trying to let someone come with a dustpan, but this is germany. they cannot stop. they cannot stop. they will not stop.
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Synapse
They are trying to save her and they keep reaching and reaching but she won't reach back. She is in this underwater cave and it's the darkest place she's ever been. Icy and hellish with her name carved on the walls. She was always good at holding her breath. Three people are reaching and yelling for her to resurface- the first is the one who knows all of her truths and none of her lies, the second is the one who knows her best, and the third is the boy who loves her despite everything. The first knows she won't come back up so he cries on his knees, the second is screaming that she'll drown herself too, and the boy dives down. She is now alarmed and swims further into the cave. She hasn't felt anything for 4 months and feeling alarmed makes her warm. The boy's lungs aren't made for this. She keeps trying to warn him of the monsters and he won't listen, he won't turn back, and all the same he knows he can't save her. She doesn't want to leave him behind but there is no place for him in this underwater hole, there's no light. There are ghosts in these walls and they never sleep. You never forget the sound, three knocks all equidistant and hallow.
Monday, May 19, 2014
Memory
He sat crouched in the room by himself for a long time after she left. He could still taste her lips on his lips and feel the warmth of her body against his, but they were a reproach now. He stared at the three wilted blossoms on the desk where she'd sat. He still had a piece of her dress in his hand.
There was only regret left over. And disgust at himself. He didn't want to move for fear of opening more cracks and letting all that in, and worse. He wished he could bathe in the touch and smell of her rather than in his failure, but the failure overwhelmed him. He'd destroyed all hope of her. He'd hurt her and upset her. How could he have done that to her?
She remembered me.
That was his worst weakness, his most toxic drug. He was so eager for her to remember, he would tell himself anything. He would do anything, believe anything, imagine anything.
She did. She knew.
In a daze he left the school long after everyone had gone. There were a few security guards left over, cleaning up the mess. Nobody bothered with him. His failures were private and invisible.
But not to her.
He'd pushed her. He's scared her. He'd besieged her. He'd vowed he wouldn't, and he did. He's kept himself together so scrupulously for so long, but when he came apart he did it with the force of centuries, he hated himself and every intention and desire he'd ever had. He hated everything he'd ever planned or wanted.
I love her. I need her. I have everything I had for her. I just wanted her to know me.
He walked until he was away from the sights and sounds. He found a clearing past the soccer field and lay down in the damp grass. He couldn't go any farther. There was no place to go, no one to see, nothing to want or hope for. He had built up his vision so patiently for so many years and wrecked it in a matter of moments.
She is my doing and my undoing.
She always had been. And what a price she had paid for it, too. He couldn't stay there. He still saw the red of the police lights beating against the heavy June sky. He got up, and his back was wet with the ground. He walked down the hill away from the school towards a two-lane road.
I've lost her again. Nobody remembers but me.
He walked along the river, and it felt good to be close to something older than he was. This river had a long memory but, unlike him, wisely kept it to itself. He thought of the Appomattox campaign, the Battle of High Bridge. How much blood had soaked into this river? And yet the river flowed. It cleansed itself and forgot. How could you cleanse yourself if you couldn't forget?
What would it be like if you didn't come back?
He sat at the edge of the river, minding the cold, muddy soak of inclinations. No matter how long you lived. Like the death bound convict glancing at the clock. You could never quite fit the small rotations to the big ones, could you?
He pulled mud covered rocks from the riverbank, small enough to fit in his pockets. Bigger ones he threw blindly into the riverbed, listening for the hollow crack of stone hitting stone of the merciful slap of soft water. He pushed rocks and mud into the pockets of his good pants, just daring his dumb autonomic brain to resist him. He stuffed a jagged few rocks into his breast pocket, a little abashed at his own stagecraft in a moment like this. There was no moment so momentous that it strangled all the little notions.
Except when you kissed her.
Decision like this were more dignified in the future or the past, or when they occurred in the lives of other people. The petty workings of your birdlike mind brought you down, and forgetting was your only salvation. It was his curse to remember lifetimes of those moments.
Appropriately burdened, he trudged to the road and followed it onto the bridge. The dark air moved cooler and faster over the water. Headlights of a car appeared and grew on the other side of the river but passed without crossing. He got to the highest point, climbed into the guardrail and sat on it, facing the river, dangling his legs over the water, feeling strangely young. He observed the rocks cutting into his skin as though they hurt someone else.
He climbed up to standing, balancing the guardrail under his stiff-soled shoes. He waves his arms to keep from slipping. Why did it seem important to jump and not to fall, when it came to the same thing? The heavy moisture in the air made his face feel wet. Another car passed.
Of all the millions of possible things he could take with him, he had a piece of her soft purple dress balled up in his hand and the sour taste of bourbon in the back of his throat. In his mind he held the look of fear on her face as she tried to get away from him and he wouldn't let go, ruining centuries of carefully nurtured hope, knowing he was ruining it, and still not being able to stop himself from ruining it.
That was enough to make him hold his balance and jump.
There was only regret left over. And disgust at himself. He didn't want to move for fear of opening more cracks and letting all that in, and worse. He wished he could bathe in the touch and smell of her rather than in his failure, but the failure overwhelmed him. He'd destroyed all hope of her. He'd hurt her and upset her. How could he have done that to her?
She remembered me.
That was his worst weakness, his most toxic drug. He was so eager for her to remember, he would tell himself anything. He would do anything, believe anything, imagine anything.
She did. She knew.
In a daze he left the school long after everyone had gone. There were a few security guards left over, cleaning up the mess. Nobody bothered with him. His failures were private and invisible.
But not to her.
He'd pushed her. He's scared her. He'd besieged her. He'd vowed he wouldn't, and he did. He's kept himself together so scrupulously for so long, but when he came apart he did it with the force of centuries, he hated himself and every intention and desire he'd ever had. He hated everything he'd ever planned or wanted.
I love her. I need her. I have everything I had for her. I just wanted her to know me.
He walked until he was away from the sights and sounds. He found a clearing past the soccer field and lay down in the damp grass. He couldn't go any farther. There was no place to go, no one to see, nothing to want or hope for. He had built up his vision so patiently for so many years and wrecked it in a matter of moments.
She is my doing and my undoing.
She always had been. And what a price she had paid for it, too. He couldn't stay there. He still saw the red of the police lights beating against the heavy June sky. He got up, and his back was wet with the ground. He walked down the hill away from the school towards a two-lane road.
I've lost her again. Nobody remembers but me.
He walked along the river, and it felt good to be close to something older than he was. This river had a long memory but, unlike him, wisely kept it to itself. He thought of the Appomattox campaign, the Battle of High Bridge. How much blood had soaked into this river? And yet the river flowed. It cleansed itself and forgot. How could you cleanse yourself if you couldn't forget?
What would it be like if you didn't come back?
He sat at the edge of the river, minding the cold, muddy soak of inclinations. No matter how long you lived. Like the death bound convict glancing at the clock. You could never quite fit the small rotations to the big ones, could you?
He pulled mud covered rocks from the riverbank, small enough to fit in his pockets. Bigger ones he threw blindly into the riverbed, listening for the hollow crack of stone hitting stone of the merciful slap of soft water. He pushed rocks and mud into the pockets of his good pants, just daring his dumb autonomic brain to resist him. He stuffed a jagged few rocks into his breast pocket, a little abashed at his own stagecraft in a moment like this. There was no moment so momentous that it strangled all the little notions.
Except when you kissed her.
Decision like this were more dignified in the future or the past, or when they occurred in the lives of other people. The petty workings of your birdlike mind brought you down, and forgetting was your only salvation. It was his curse to remember lifetimes of those moments.
Appropriately burdened, he trudged to the road and followed it onto the bridge. The dark air moved cooler and faster over the water. Headlights of a car appeared and grew on the other side of the river but passed without crossing. He got to the highest point, climbed into the guardrail and sat on it, facing the river, dangling his legs over the water, feeling strangely young. He observed the rocks cutting into his skin as though they hurt someone else.
He climbed up to standing, balancing the guardrail under his stiff-soled shoes. He waves his arms to keep from slipping. Why did it seem important to jump and not to fall, when it came to the same thing? The heavy moisture in the air made his face feel wet. Another car passed.
Of all the millions of possible things he could take with him, he had a piece of her soft purple dress balled up in his hand and the sour taste of bourbon in the back of his throat. In his mind he held the look of fear on her face as she tried to get away from him and he wouldn't let go, ruining centuries of carefully nurtured hope, knowing he was ruining it, and still not being able to stop himself from ruining it.
That was enough to make him hold his balance and jump.
Sunday, March 2, 2014
Souldiers
I understand soldiers now, I think. Ready to give their all for one sole purpose of the freedom of others. Going into full forced missions with willing hearts and knowing that one could not come back alive, I think that’s all part of this. Maybe I always knew I’d come back home in the casket you chose for yourself. I’m a soldier on my back with little air left in my lungs, dust is forming around me, and I’m watching the impeding darkness that I fought against fall as you are set free. I’m on my back and I know that this fight was right, I know that when I close my eyes and return to the dust that my duty will have been done. Loving you was like war and you were the yellow ribbons tied around the oak trees that begged me to go back to where I came from. I don’t know when this desert sand will settle or when I will have something to give again, but when I do- I’ll most likely want to use it on you.
Sunday, February 23, 2014
Trance
Had you ripped
my heart completely out
I guess it wouldn't
have
been so bad
But you made sure
to leave it half way in
so I could feel it all
Monday, February 10, 2014
Someday I Will Stop Being Young
Someday I will stop being young and getting stupid tattoos. There are 4 people in my house. We each have different personalities. I cut my hair over the bathroom sink with old scissors and everything I own smells of coffee shops or fresh lavender.
There is a banner on my side that says ”Make Art Not War" and there's a confederate flag on the opposite wall that doesn't belong to me. We sit around the kitchen floor with our socks on and argue about the compost pile and Karl Marx and the necessity of violence when The Rev comes. Whatever the fuck The Rev means.
Every time my best friend laughs I want to grab him by the shoulders and shout “Grow old with me and never kiss me on the mouth!” I want us to spend the next 80 years together eating Doritos and taking night drives. I want to be Oscar the Grouch. I want him and his girlfriend to be Bert and Ernie. I want us to live on Sesame Street and I will park my trash can on their front stoop and we will be friends every day. If I ever seem grouchy it’s just because I am a little afraid of all that fun.
There is a river running through this city I know as well as my own name. It’s the first place I’ve ever called home besides a few people's arms. Somedays I think I'm on the Truman Show and everyone is part of some cosmic joke. I don’t think its poetry to say I’m in love with the rain. I don’t think it’s poetry to say I’m in love with the knots of your hair. I don’t think it’s blasphemy to say that certain clouds look like Jesus.
I think secrets need to be kept in shoeboxes and that some letters are never supposed to be sent.
There is always wine asking to be slurped on front porches.
There are always crushed packs of those candy stick cigarettes in my back pockets. I have been wearing the same patterned shorts and listening to the same 5 minute and 27 second song for 10 days
. Someday I will stop being young and getting stupid tattoos.
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