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Those are your eyes, ain’t they?

  • Posted on December 12, 2007 at 7:36 am

They say when a door is shut, that a window’s gonna open sometime. What happens when that door shuts and you find yourself in an entirely different house? What you thought you were gonna be seein’ out the window is something else entirely. You can’t stay inside, because it isn’t your room anymore. The floorboards don’t squeak the same when you walk over them, and you certainly didn’t pick out the goofy lookin’ wallpaper. You either gotta step out into a yard you know nothing about, or wrench that door open and figure out just what sort of house you’ve gotten yourself into.

 

Occasionally you find some stuff that’s yours. Maybe some pictures scattered under the bed. You’re looking at them, and you know that you’ve been pals with them. But just like everything else that’s changed around you, they’re not the same people anymore either. You don’t know whether you’re supposed to be disappointed or angry – or hell, maybe you could be a little relieved.

 

But the part of you that remembers your old house, it’s not ready to let go of all those echoes. It can’t see, it won’t see, the way everything has turned out. Because you know that when you finally go out that window, some of those folks won’t be there anymore. You’re going to forget some of those memories that really defined who you were for the longest time.

 

But here’s the thing, I figure – you spend so much time looking around on how everything’s gotten up and damn well done a one eighty on you, you don’t notice that it everything looks so funny because while you were distracted someone snuck in and changed out your eyes.

 

Nothing changed. It was always your room, always your yard – but one morning you woke up and you saw everything differently.

 

Sometimes, sometimes, you could touch something and remember. But it’s never going to be the same again. All you have got to go on is sensations that crumble like ash the moment you try to push any deeper. An’ old song that sounds so damn familiar, but you can’t remember the lyrics or why it had you bawlin’ in the car when it started playing.

 

But I’m okay, I’m going to be more than okay. Because even if I didn’t have that window, I have a hatchet. And if I had too, I’d bust my way out in a storm of bricks and plaster.

Take a breath.

  • Posted on November 16, 2007 at 1:40 am

Her feet are touching the earth

and yet

water adrift from eyes is drowning her.

 

She can buck, hair trailing like sodden seaweed

but still

salty warmth crawls inside her lungs

 

Whoever said dying this way becomes easy

that you

eventually feel detached and comfortable

 

they must have learned to grieve with tears

to manage

the sorrow and still live life

  

And she’s got a blind fold on, three miles high.

  • Posted on October 15, 2007 at 4:05 am

Her pulse visibly jackhammered in her gaunt stomach, shuddering beneath her navel. Moving her hand from her chest to her belly, she pushed her fingertips against her flesh and down onto her aorta. She was fuckin’ disappointed that it didn’t beat out some sort of morse-code solution to her problem.

 

Then there was movement against her back. Ah. Right. Her. Dessie rolled her head back until it came into contact with a well muscled shoulder. “You know.” she lifted her hand into the air, studying the backs of her grimy and ragged nails. “If any of us had to be awake, somehow, I didn’t expect this combination.”

Continue reading ‘And she’s got a blind fold on, three miles high.’

Intruders.

  • Posted on October 15, 2007 at 2:44 am

You left your fence open

and your dogs went out to play

then the grass got tall

and the weeds ate up

all the flowers

so you couldn’t see

the vermin

that crept on ground

 

fence got all rusty

and the door was bent

latch just didn’t work right

so when you got around

to closin’ it up tight

didn’t work no more

 

anyone could come in

any damn thing

and what were you gonna do?

seein’ a yard like that

they’d think

who’d give a shit if

i went on in?

  

Ill intent slips off of me pretty hilariously.

  • Posted on September 4, 2007 at 5:21 am

I can’t do it

I’m going to get sloppy

I can’t be it

That’ll be another beer

I can’t hold it

Cheap bic lighter

and five minutes peace

 

I can’t help it

‘Cuz bubbling over

is just what I do

I can’t will it

All that shit I ignore

explodes into

tears or flames

 

I can’t beat it

You’re gonna be

so damn uncomfortable

I can’t stop it

When I run to

your rescue

I can’t perfect it

Always going to be

the sinner

and the saint.

 

I can’t regret it

life has no time

to waste on

manufactured shame.

  

No Show.

  • Posted on July 26, 2007 at 7:18 am

It was the first time

she ever walked

off the field

she took her shredded glove

her dented bat

and her cracked helmet

and went home

 

the sun had worn

that uniform to threads

pale and bruised

her skin flashed like 

the underside of a fish

through her jersey

 

her heat bleached hair

crackled like fire

beneath the faded cap

and blood fell like a 

crumb trail

as her cleats pushed

through the decaying

rubber soles.

  

Fallback.

  • Posted on July 13, 2007 at 8:04 am

Another snippet morning, I believe. It was a cool wet day, which threw my memories into autumn mode. I only seem to focus on certain events around that time of year. They’re chilly and bittersweet, and they just wouldn’t do without the crunch of spent leaves beneath my feet. That strong autumn wind, for me, exists to sweep my attentions away from wandering headlong into the past.

 

Whatever is going on, it’s still evolving, still being nurtured deep down inside of me. But the roots of the very thing have already begun to show, changing the way I think and feel. This is the creation of wising up. I’ve walked down that path of temptation, stumbled out onto the other side and learned to heal from my wounds without scarring. I’m certain I’m the same girl, deep down, and that my potential for loving is still a well which continues to remain bottomless for me. 

 

But I’ve casually learned to separate that fleshy part of me from that insistent white-knight soul of mine. I know there is an animal inside of me that wants to submit, to give into the simple pleasures of life that most think naught twice over. She’s a creature that wants free of my personal bondage to put herself into someone else’s. I cannot abide by this. Where she goes, I go, and there is not a decision yet that she’s tried to make that I’ve vehemently fought every inch of the way.

 

I thought I could live in coexistence with her. But as I’ve grown older, her demands border on the impossible and dangerous – they have no concern for me. She’s no longer welcome, she endangers too many of the things I care for. She can starve. I will not give in. There’s too much I stand to lose. 

 

I’ve finally realized what I’m fighting for.

  

Home isn’t always under a roof.

  • Posted on June 6, 2007 at 7:22 am

It was a sour taste that lead her outside that day. It sat on her tongue reminiscent of a spongy brick and refused to be spit out even with the most furious of words. The greatest dismay in that early morning sun was that the air smelt like lilac and jasmine but the taste still remained.

 

What was she doing there?

 

She was holding together fine wires and trying to bind them with smoke. Her heritage sprawled behind her like Cambodian minefields laid into a magnificent garden. Though she wanted so dearly to maintain the hedges and flowers, the ground threatened her very life. There was no fairy tale gift of flight, in which she could glide amongst the rows and pluck the weeds and brambles without harm. It was only something she could view with a mixture of horror and adoration. 

 

Would she be the first to lay a path around it safely or one of the many of her blood who never made the trek across? She did not want to carve another endless and dangerous path within. Surely, there must be a way through, without abandoning the effort and turning away from the very thing that made her herself. If there was so a way, would she manage it a martyr or a causality? And in the most happiest of endings, could she end up on the other side with her soles intact and her past disarmed? 

 

Could she, just possibly, emerge from that garden with plants not nourished by tears and begin another plot anew? It’s hard to say or predict, because sometimes she wonders herself if it is the mines among the flora that make her history so profound and stirring.

  

 

However, today, that sourness on her tongue gives her no hope for reflection or foraging on. It’s just a day,yet another one in which she learns to live with both the roses and their thorns.

  

Lonely Mary.

  • Posted on May 26, 2007 at 8:47 am

What happened? I remembered when the bottle was my savior and damnation. Now I’m so incredibly indifferent. My martini has become the ex-boyfriend at my party. I sure as hell know he’s there, and yes – we’re still friends thank you very much, but I’m not going to maneuver through a room full of people to start up a conversation.

 

I nurse from the drink, I twirl my straw, and I give the glass startled looks. ‘Did I really only drink that much?’. I used to have quite the crowded table, with little empty cups crowding like Elementary School Field Day Prizes. Now it’s just me and this one glass, and dammit, it doesn’t appear to be drinking itself. I don’t think it’s age that causes me to notice that even a single drink makes my contacts get sticky. My stomach, even though it dearly loves you, Ms. Bloody Mary, doesn’t chill with you as well as before. I can already anticipate the sleepy come down, the irritating knowledge that I’ll wake up the next morning and something will be off.

 

Did I really delude myself that much? How could a driver’s license lead me on to conveniently forget that being intoxicated provides a good thirty minutes of fun followed by two days of apologizing or a diet of stale bread? I mean, I won’t refuse that vodka and tonic. I’ll be the first to admit that I like a drink with my dinner. But I think it’s time that I admit that it isn’t all cracked up as I’d thought it’d be. I find drinking now more of a chore than a pleasure. I hesitate at the thought of the next day being ruined because my stomach’s ‘just not right’ and my head is ’still a little fuzzy’. Now, I’m not even talking about getting drunk here folks. Just the two drinks seems to do that to me these days. It’s not tolerance, because I certainly don’t get drunk – I get sick.

 

So the bar tonight was stranger than usual thanks to these revelations. There was a walker in the middle of the floor. Hey, if you’re still coming to bars with a walker, I’ll buy you a drink. You deserve it because I give a thumbs up to dedications of all sorts. There was the pool table hustler who made forty dollars in one pop and seemed genuinely surprised his opponent left after bitter defeat. There was also the ass-ette that put her cigarette out in the sink. None of these things really mean anything in particular.

 

So to wrap this up, I’m still going to have my damn Bloody Mary. I just don’t think she’ll have as many sisters as usual.

  

Stowaway

  • Posted on May 2, 2007 at 3:15 am

This is all getting too heavy

My ribs creak with the pressure

Of being an overladen vessel

trying to make it across the sea

 

I don’t want to do this anymore

There is no anchor that can stop this

and no sails that can bring me to shore 

 

Even if I sank

these ghosts would never

abandon ship.