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Arthur-S-Ebbers
My memories are few and far between - a strange symptom of a strange sickenss - a brain worm: one that chews. One that leaves spaces, pauses, where previously there were none. A parasite, an affliction that eats, that consumes. My memories are few and far between, they keep me up at night. Loud and unruly. Misplaced. Incomplete. Lacking. They are a large crowd, gaining, invading, growing, incoming, moving ever closer, attacking. Pitchforks made of wood and something I don't recognise. A vague feeling of unease, a displaced feeling, uncomfortable and unreal. A reminder of all I am not. Of all I have not. My memories are many and chronic, a forever affliction, unending and all-consuming. Mistakes I've made; feelings I've ignored. Things I've lost: sisters and lovers. Things I've found, fading out, fading in.   It is a sort of death, in that regard: I was a child and now I am not. An age, a past, laid out beneath you, stuffed in a box, suffocated under six feet of dirt, a tombstone rammed between its eyes. One memory or two, a lifetime, sinking into the mud. An earth worm: one that chews. Your body belongs to you, and your body belongs to someone else. A boy. An ancient thing. You and the other you. You and all you could be. You and all you are not. I am a man lacking in memories, there are gaps in my life I cannot fill, places and people, fuzzy, faded. Real and not real, mixing together, obscurring, distorting, corrupting. False memories: tales of my youth told only by drunk aunties and dead grandmas. Fantasies created by others, a lacking and a need to fill it. Tales of my youth locked away, burnt into diaries and journals, hidden away or destroyed entirely, told, scrawled and scratched into the walls, into the mind. A frightened mind. A disease, an affliction. Delusions and hallucinations, paranoia. Fantasies created by me.   And I am a man drowning in them, good and bad. Real and not. We are patchwork quilts of all we were and all we are and all we will be. We are sewn together and torn apart. Our stitches just scars, our colours faded, unskilled attempts at beauty, at life. Worn down and dusty, seams failing, patterns ugly. Used and loved and then unused and unloved. A circle. A roundabout. New and old. Good and bad. Used and unused.   But you are not your body. Your temple prays to no-one. You're a work of art, and you're canvas of just shape and colour. You're a patchwork quilt and your scars are just stiches.   You have no memories, a blank slate, dead and now reborn, a child and then not. A body that is not you, that could never be you, a mind - a collection of memories, dreams, realities, people, places, sisters, lovers - without meaning, a mind that has nothing. A blank slate. A momentary madness. A mind that is not you, and a mind that could be nothing but. And yet you have so many, written into your skin, carved, engraved. Trapped, running and jumping through your veins. Unstoppable. Unbeatable. Real or not, it's all the same, ask yourself: which is the greater sin, to have too many memories or too few? Which holds you by the throat and which goes straight for the lungs? The excess and the absence. It's all-consuming; it's suffocating. A brain worm; six feet of dirt. You are a man lacking in memories, and you are a man drowning in them.
0
Jun 6, 2025
Jun 6, 2025 at 7:38 AM UTC
You Are Not Your Body
My memories are few and far between - a strange symptom of a strange sickenss - a brain worm: one that chews. One that leaves spaces, pauses, where previously there were none. A parasite, an affliction that eats, that consumes. My memories are few and far between, they keep me up at night. Loud and unruly. Misplaced. Incomplete. Lacking. They are a large crowd, gaining, invading, growing, incoming, moving ever closer, attacking. Pitchforks made of wood and something I don't recognise. A vague feeling of unease, a displaced feeling, uncomfortable and unreal. A reminder of all I am not. Of all I have not. My memories are many and chronic, a forever affliction, unending and all-consuming. Mistakes I've made; feelings I've ignored. Things I've lost: sisters and lovers. Things I've found, fading out, fading in.   It is a sort of death, in that regard: I was a child and now I am not. An age, a past, laid out beneath you, stuffed in a box, suffocated under six feet of dirt, a tombstone rammed between its eyes. One memory or two, a lifetime, sinking into the mud. An earth worm: one that chews. Your body belongs to you, and your body belongs to someone else. A boy. An ancient thing. You and the other you. You and all you could be. You and all you are not. I am a man lacking in memories, there are gaps in my life I cannot fill, places and people, fuzzy, faded. Real and not real, mixing together, obscurring, distorting, corrupting. False memories: tales of my youth told only by drunk aunties and dead grandmas. Fantasies created by others, a lacking and a need to fill it. Tales of my youth locked away, burnt into diaries and journals, hidden away or destroyed entirely, told, scrawled and scratched into the walls, into the mind. A frightened mind. A disease, an affliction. Delusions and hallucinations, paranoia. Fantasies created by me.   And I am a man drowning in them, good and bad. Real and not. We are patchwork quilts of all we were and all we are and all we will be. We are sewn together and torn apart. Our stitches just scars, our colours faded, unskilled attempts at beauty, at life. Worn down and dusty, seams failing, patterns ugly. Used and loved and then unused and unloved. A circle. A roundabout. New and old. Good and bad. Used and unused.   But you are not your body. Your temple prays to no-one. You're a work of art, and you're canvas of just shape and colour. You're a patchwork quilt and your scars are just stiches.   You have no memories, a blank slate, dead and now reborn, a child and then not. A body that is not you, that could never be you, a mind - a collection of memories, dreams, realities, people, places, sisters, lovers - without meaning, a mind that has nothing. A blank slate. A momentary madness. A mind that is not you, and a mind that could be nothing but. And yet you have so many, written into your skin, carved, engraved. Trapped, running and jumping through your veins. Unstoppable. Unbeatable. Real or not, it's all the same, ask yourself: which is the greater sin, to have too many memories or too few? Which holds you by the throat and which goes straight for the lungs? The excess and the absence. It's all-consuming; it's suffocating. A brain worm; six feet of dirt. You are a man lacking in memories, and you are a man drowning in them.
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107
She likes it when it barks, she likes the noise it makes: a child crying without the guilt. Agressive and violent; not her fault. The victim of blood-soaked eyes and gnashing teeth. The victim of a deafening silence, and the deafening need to fill it.
0
Jun 6, 2025
Jun 6, 2025 at 7:37 AM UTC
That Stupid Dog is Ruining My Life
Ebbing and flowing in winter months, buried soft in snow and cold. Painted skin and eyes so they pulse in deep red. Painted hair and nails, green. Glowing. Sharpen the edge of arms and fingers to points and prickles of festive delight, mix with crowds alike, Make whole and make useless and make holly.
0
Jun 6, 2025
Jun 6, 2025 at 7:36 AM UTC
Make Me Holly
Full room, heavy boxes - emptied. Small and cramped, pictures on the walls, on the floor, unfinished works of art, drawings, poems, writings, scrawled, unintelligible, unfinished, unfinished, unfinished! And his mumbling. God, his constant mumbling. Humming. Behind the door. locked, trapped. Stuck. A moment, a knocking, a rumbling. A constant room, a heavy room - emptied. It has tall concrete trees, mountains, black glass. This noisy town, this noisy town. It has statues from long ago, shining like moonlight. And he shaves his head, his violent head until it is clean and pure. He just wants clean, he just wants pure. There's makeup and skirts ripped, long, ankle-length, statues again, boy/girl 80/20, music, laughter down the hall. A silent bedroom, a pounding on the door, echoes. Deep breaths, deep breaths. Echoes, echoes and deep breaths. It rumbles here, the echoes, the breaths, this noise town, silent. Blue eyes and blue sea crash and explode and push against the rocks, the sand. There's a rumbling, down below, cars and drawers, this monster food, locks, locks, locked. Opened. Closed. Unlocked. Furniture scraping across the wood, the dancers dance backstage, in the restaurant, in the alley, the church, the pews. It's the wrong language and no translator. It's the car accident, the train crash, plane crash, shipwreck, ship start. It's a hand against wood. It's a gentle sea and sunlight on skin.
0
Jun 6, 2025
Jun 6, 2025 at 7:33 AM UTC
And He'll Sleep
The years don't last long. The days are short but the weeks take forever, November feels like Thursday. Once I am dead all I want to do is rust, everything is changing in such a familiar way. My life was quiet and your hair is getting long again.
0
Jun 6, 2025
Jun 6, 2025 at 7:33 AM UTC
Untitled (1)
It was a cold and early morning, the morning I realised the full extent of the universe. I saw it, glittering and flickering, blinking softly, twinkling like a diamond, like a star, like a universe. It was Spring, of course, the end of Spring. Summer on the horizon, Summer dripping in. And I caught sight of the universe, glittering like a universe does and in it I saw a man, hunched and wrinkled, his face a crater, a ravine, eyes cold and grey, sunken, lips chapped, hair thin. He opened his mouth and a voice, cracked, poured out, filling the space, like water into a *** overflowing, curling around the universe, a liquid voice. It spoke and it said:       "I am a wizard, the greatest of our age,        the greatest of all,        a necromancer,        young, killed, reborn, reborn, reborn!        And I know you and I love you        and I've always know you and always loved you,        and I know where you began        and I think I know where you end." And then he paused. He smacked his lips, his cold grey eyes blinked up at me, and then he continued:       "Child, I am starting to fear your birth into sorrow." And I'd never felt so know, so understood, so exposed. And then he took my hand and asked that I walk with him and how could I say no? So we walked, waded through his liquid voice, circling the universe, round and round. And he asked me to speak and how could I say no? So I said the first thing that came to mind, a quiet thought that appeared when I looked into him, into his cold, grey eyes. And I said it soft and hesitant, my voice wavered, but I said it all the same:       "I am no wizard, no necromancer,        I am a nothing, a nobody,        but soon I will grow, I will grow.        I will grow and behold! Yes!        Yes, I will grow and behold!        And behold!        And behold!" And our circling continued and he laughed and said:       "Child, nobody is anybody.        Child, once you are grown        you will be laid to stone, to dust,        to dust, to stone." I told him such words reminded me of the construction work near my house, of how it looks like a desert, of how I don't think anybody should live there. Should live here. I told him that I need trees and I need air and I need mud and not the kind you get there. Not the kind you get here. And he just smiled and stopped walking and he turned to me, his cold grey eyes filled with tears, his smile remained and he spoke for the final time:       "We live here only,        and we live here always,        and we live here good.        Come, look with me, child, don't fear,        don't worry.        My hand is in yours,        yours in mine,        old and young mixing together.        An eternity between us        between the spaces in our fingers, our palms,        old and young merging together." And so, his hand in mine, mine in his, he led me closer and closer to that universe we'd circled until we were millimetres from it and his hand tightened in mine, and mine tightened in his and I let him walk me inside. Inside the blinking, twinkling universe. For a moment all I saw was sound and light, a horrible feeling, a great discomfort, great displacement, a feeling I'll never forget. But then it stopped. My hand was empty, the old man was gone and I was inside the universe and it was not what I was expecting. It did not glitter or flicker, blink or twinkle. No, the universe is in fact plain and boring. No, the universe is nothing but a spiral staircase, it's walls are made entirely of mirrors. It does nothing but reflect. And it was in this moment that all my thoughts became one, streaming together filling my mind, my body. And I smiled and my eyes filled with tears and the thought was this:       When I die, I have but one request,       that you bury me where I began. For in this staircase in this reflection, I know that my only want was to live a futile life, to walk forever and then right back again. And it was after this revelation that I was returned home on a cold and early morning at the end of Spring, where the Summer drips in. And I was half awake and half asleep, and I half dreamt of an old wizard, tears in his cold grey eyes, a bright light flickering, bringing him home, smiling. And I half stared at the rising sun and the rolling clouds seeping into my bedroom from half open curtains, and I thought:       We live here only,       and we live here always,       and we live here good.
0
Jun 6, 2025
Jun 6, 2025 at 7:33 AM UTC
The Universe is a Mirror Reflecting Back, Reflecting Back, Reflecting Back
It was a cold and early morning, the morning I realised the full extent of the universe. I saw it, glittering and flickering, blinking softly, twinkling like a diamond, like a star, like a universe. It was Spring, of course, the end of Spring. Summer on the horizon, Summer dripping in. And I caught sight of the universe, glittering like a universe does and in it I saw a man, hunched and wrinkled, his face a crater, a ravine, eyes cold and grey, sunken, lips chapped, hair thin. He opened his mouth and a voice, cracked, poured out, filling the space, like water into a *** overflowing, curling around the universe, a liquid voice. It spoke and it said:       "I am a wizard, the greatest of our age,        the greatest of all,        a necromancer,        young, killed, reborn, reborn, reborn!        And I know you and I love you        and I've always know you and always loved you,        and I know where you began        and I think I know where you end." And then he paused. He smacked his lips, his cold grey eyes blinked up at me, and then he continued:       "Child, I am starting to fear your birth into sorrow." And I'd never felt so know, so understood, so exposed. And then he took my hand and asked that I walk with him and how could I say no? So we walked, waded through his liquid voice, circling the universe, round and round. And he asked me to speak and how could I say no? So I said the first thing that came to mind, a quiet thought that appeared when I looked into him, into his cold, grey eyes. And I said it soft and hesitant, my voice wavered, but I said it all the same:       "I am no wizard, no necromancer,        I am a nothing, a nobody,        but soon I will grow, I will grow.        I will grow and behold! Yes!        Yes, I will grow and behold!        And behold!        And behold!" And our circling continued and he laughed and said:       "Child, nobody is anybody.        Child, once you are grown        you will be laid to stone, to dust,        to dust, to stone." I told him such words reminded me of the construction work near my house, of how it looks like a desert, of how I don't think anybody should live there. Should live here. I told him that I need trees and I need air and I need mud and not the kind you get there. Not the kind you get here. And he just smiled and stopped walking and he turned to me, his cold grey eyes filled with tears, his smile remained and he spoke for the final time:       "We live here only,        and we live here always,        and we live here good.        Come, look with me, child, don't fear,        don't worry.        My hand is in yours,        yours in mine,        old and young mixing together.        An eternity between us        between the spaces in our fingers, our palms,        old and young merging together." And so, his hand in mine, mine in his, he led me closer and closer to that universe we'd circled until we were millimetres from it and his hand tightened in mine, and mine tightened in his and I let him walk me inside. Inside the blinking, twinkling universe. For a moment all I saw was sound and light, a horrible feeling, a great discomfort, great displacement, a feeling I'll never forget. But then it stopped. My hand was empty, the old man was gone and I was inside the universe and it was not what I was expecting. It did not glitter or flicker, blink or twinkle. No, the universe is in fact plain and boring. No, the universe is nothing but a spiral staircase, it's walls are made entirely of mirrors. It does nothing but reflect. And it was in this moment that all my thoughts became one, streaming together filling my mind, my body. And I smiled and my eyes filled with tears and the thought was this:       When I die, I have but one request,       that you bury me where I began. For in this staircase in this reflection, I know that my only want was to live a futile life, to walk forever and then right back again. And it was after this revelation that I was returned home on a cold and early morning at the end of Spring, where the Summer drips in. And I was half awake and half asleep, and I half dreamt of an old wizard, tears in his cold grey eyes, a bright light flickering, bringing him home, smiling. And I half stared at the rising sun and the rolling clouds seeping into my bedroom from half open curtains, and I thought:       We live here only,       and we live here always,       and we live here good.
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131
Spring came and went quickly this year, a brief headache as the air pressure shifted and then the sun came in. And then the Summer came in. Too hot and too dry. Too busy. The hustle and bustle of sweaty people who wear too little and talk too much. This season is no good This season is no good at all. It will be a bad day today. A bad week perhaps. A bad month. Too hot and too dry. Demanding. Taxing. The machines not working, the people not stopping. Hate. Hate. Hate. It is ungodly how much hate one can feel towards the changing of the skies, and all who abide by it. Hate in the nanoangatrom, unequal to one one-billionth. There is no season shorter than Summer, not here. Spring and Autumn stagger themselves: a birth and a death, spread out across two months or more. And Winter lingers, clings; it doesn’t easily let go. Summer is Summer once and then it’s done. Summer is Summer for a day a week, a month, and then it’s not. And yet it stretches. An eon, an age, eternal, hot and dry, unable to sleep; unable to stay awake, a sort of purgatory – long days and short nights. No end. No end. No end. And so, wait, a day, a week, a month, on and on, over and over, until around comes Autumn. The leaves browning, the blossoms falling. A decay that spreads, the beautiful kind: soft on the eyes, on the soul. Breathable. A breathable decay. October again; slow, calm. Blossoms falling. Slow. Slow. And a thought, soft like the growing clouds and the promise of snow, a thought that lingers, that fades in, that leaves a stain:     if today is not a good day     then make it one. The trees are bare now, there’s room for more. Room for you, to hang and dangle, snap and crumple, to drift gently down like falling blossom slowly into a heap on the ground, buried in pink or white, buried in the death of Summer, in the death of Spring.
0
Jun 6, 2025
Jun 6, 2025 at 7:32 AM UTC
Falling Blossom Slowly
Spring came and went quickly this year, a brief headache as the air pressure shifted and then the sun came in. And then the Summer came in. Too hot and too dry. Too busy. The hustle and bustle of sweaty people who wear too little and talk too much. This season is no good This season is no good at all. It will be a bad day today. A bad week perhaps. A bad month. Too hot and too dry. Demanding. Taxing. The machines not working, the people not stopping. Hate. Hate. Hate. It is ungodly how much hate one can feel towards the changing of the skies, and all who abide by it. Hate in the nanoangatrom, unequal to one one-billionth. There is no season shorter than Summer, not here. Spring and Autumn stagger themselves: a birth and a death, spread out across two months or more. And Winter lingers, clings; it doesn’t easily let go. Summer is Summer once and then it’s done. Summer is Summer for a day a week, a month, and then it’s not. And yet it stretches. An eon, an age, eternal, hot and dry, unable to sleep; unable to stay awake, a sort of purgatory – long days and short nights. No end. No end. No end. And so, wait, a day, a week, a month, on and on, over and over, until around comes Autumn. The leaves browning, the blossoms falling. A decay that spreads, the beautiful kind: soft on the eyes, on the soul. Breathable. A breathable decay. October again; slow, calm. Blossoms falling. Slow. Slow. And a thought, soft like the growing clouds and the promise of snow, a thought that lingers, that fades in, that leaves a stain:     if today is not a good day     then make it one. The trees are bare now, there’s room for more. Room for you, to hang and dangle, snap and crumple, to drift gently down like falling blossom slowly into a heap on the ground, buried in pink or white, buried in the death of Summer, in the death of Spring.
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74
I want him to love me the way one loves a whimpering and neglected dog, with pity and with worry and with shame. He will find me in an alley, shivering and shaking, hiding from the rain. He will coax me out from beneath whatever discarded scrap I am cowering under, he will wrap me in a towel or blanket or his jacket, something - anything - warm. He will carry me home, to his home. He will place me by the radiator, turned up to full. I will curl up beneath it, still shivering, still shaking, while he goes to the kitchen in the hopes of finding me something to eat. He will rummage through the fridge trying, to the best of his ability, to recall exactly what does and what does not **** a dog. "A lot." I will say. "More than you think." I will say. And he will just smile and bring me something that doesn't. I tell him I will not live long. He could do anything and I would not live long. He says he has forgiven worse sins. I tell him I hope he never dies. He tells me I will be disappointed. I tell him I love him. He says I love him the way a whimpering and neglected dog does, desperately, painfully, with a need and a hunger found only in children and anorexics. He tells me he loves me too. I tell him I am sorry. He says he has forgiven worse sins. He strokes between my eyes, a gentle spot, designed only for soothing something to sleep. Perhaps by morning I will be cured, my whimpering ceased, my shakes subsided. I will run through his house, tail wagging, while he smiles and laughs and drinks his coffee. Or perhaps there will be no change, perhaps he will have to drive me to the vet and have me put down. Perhaps he will want to. A mangy thing, sick and diseased. Irreparable. Unsavable. Perhaps he won't need to. Perhaps by morning I will already be dead. But for now I will sleep, warm and fed, a hand soft between the eyes.
0
Mar 9, 2025
Mar 9, 2025 at 3:28 PM UTC
I Hope He Never Dies
I want him to love me the way one loves a whimpering and neglected dog, with pity and with worry and with shame. He will find me in an alley, shivering and shaking, hiding from the rain. He will coax me out from beneath whatever discarded scrap I am cowering under, he will wrap me in a towel or blanket or his jacket, something - anything - warm. He will carry me home, to his home. He will place me by the radiator, turned up to full. I will curl up beneath it, still shivering, still shaking, while he goes to the kitchen in the hopes of finding me something to eat. He will rummage through the fridge trying, to the best of his ability, to recall exactly what does and what does not **** a dog. "A lot." I will say. "More than you think." I will say. And he will just smile and bring me something that doesn't. I tell him I will not live long. He could do anything and I would not live long. He says he has forgiven worse sins. I tell him I hope he never dies. He tells me I will be disappointed. I tell him I love him. He says I love him the way a whimpering and neglected dog does, desperately, painfully, with a need and a hunger found only in children and anorexics. He tells me he loves me too. I tell him I am sorry. He says he has forgiven worse sins. He strokes between my eyes, a gentle spot, designed only for soothing something to sleep. Perhaps by morning I will be cured, my whimpering ceased, my shakes subsided. I will run through his house, tail wagging, while he smiles and laughs and drinks his coffee. Or perhaps there will be no change, perhaps he will have to drive me to the vet and have me put down. Perhaps he will want to. A mangy thing, sick and diseased. Irreparable. Unsavable. Perhaps he won't need to. Perhaps by morning I will already be dead. But for now I will sleep, warm and fed, a hand soft between the eyes.
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53
ALL THE CHAOS SEEMS NORMAL NOW, EITHER WAY I'LL BE IN MY ROOM. NONE OF MY TEXT MESSAGES SEND AND I'M TOO AFRAID TO CALL.
0
Mar 9, 2025
Mar 9, 2025 at 3:27 PM UTC
A SHORT POEM
I feel like a detective brushing down a crime scene, or perhaps a runaway bride, hiding in plain sight. Lost but not gone, the fingerprints washed away, the ****** weapon left behind. There's no past like it, and no future to follow; a ghost that breathes, a newborn that doesn't. I feel like the final chapter, and nothing more. I haunt, I linger, I remain, though only in death and decay. Though only as a ghost. My mother taught me that. My mother taught me how to haunt, how to be there but not really. How to be a ghost that breathes, or, perhaps, a newborn that doesn't.
0
Mar 9, 2025
Mar 9, 2025 at 3:23 PM UTC
A Strange Sort of Death