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GemHell
28/American
“The street is dangerous” the boy says to his sister in hand at the crosswalk. It is 2pm on the corner and the school kids begin to pass the cafe. Strollers and stragglers others bounding alongside their tired mothers. Some gaze upwards stretching their arms towards buildings and lights, things they cannot reach but hope to one day grasp. Others absorbed into small devices held in their hands, things they cannot touch but will try to for maybe a long time. So many come still all at waist height in their multicolored jackets, Pokemon backpacks, and Spiderman sneakers that drag along the sidewalk. And finally the little girl who touches all she passes — the iron fence, my chair, the table — as if the world only becomes real under her palm.
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May 1, 2017
May 1, 2017 at 10:27 AM UTC
On Madison and Seneca
i want to split my shadow from my body to feel the peel of its black scab press my soul smooth under the hot heel of an iron i flip through old notebooks each page an incomplete image i see a child smearing paint to feel it glide beneath his fingers with no need to believe in the colors that swirl under his hand he only loves the stubborn way they gum up in his palm i see myself as a blank page waiting to be written into motion as if some line of dark ink could form a portrait each turn of phrase a brush stroke thick with oil, the heavy layers piled on i see a man awoken in a dark room dinner is over and daylight passed through the window snow falls in clusters and hits the ground with tiny puffs the house is empty except for muddied prints tracked in by someone’s shoes 

he traces them down the stairs out the door as they wind through the yard past the wooden fence that borders the tree line as they are slowly swallowed by the whiteness
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Apr 30, 2017
Apr 30, 2017 at 12:58 AM UTC
Old Notebooks
My life began and ended then began again. Old relatives and friends came and went like images scrolling on a computer screen. It’s green glow spills onto my skin and into this dark room where time stands still and clothes pile in the corner, while outside perennials bend and open their petals towards the sun to swallow its gaze, then bow back down in respect for the ghost moon who sends spirits that fold lines into the faces of those in sleep. They play with our dreams like wooden marionettes and smooth the edges of memories just as bone dulls a steel blade. 

I’m sure they have visited us, whispered some secret out our mouths.
 As I sit here, I try to place us somewhere between the cycle of day and night, between pixelated moments encoded in gigabytes on my hard drive. I place a number on a virtual file to hide it from prying hands that come like a mist in the night. Safe between the ones and zeros and electric highways of a computer chip, not so different from those in my brain where nerves endings could zap me back to a time when I knew the dip and curve of your collar bone, the taste of menthol on your breath, those late nights when we first met and fell asleep to the sound of the dogs barking as the neighbor’s children left for school.
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Apr 30, 2017
Apr 30, 2017 at 12:34 AM UTC
Memory Stick
I owe nine hundred ninety-six dollars and ten cents to a bank somewhere in the hills of Upstate New York. There in a concrete bunker men collect ballpoint pens, dribble coffee on their wrinkled ties, lick their palms slick their hair and punch my number into a database where a machine speaks my name into a receiver and plays a smooth jazz song -- a genre manufactured to hypnotize the listener into eternal apprehension. Last night for the first time, I thumbed the soft cove behind the empty piercings of your earlobe. We're loaned out little moments (your breath in my mouth) and charged interest (for the spit on my lip.) I always ask too much -- more than I could ever give back. Every good day marked with its cost. I want to know how your body fits against mine. If anything could ever feel completely whole -- more than just a fraction of some old god's fortune I've borrowed one too many times. One day maybe he will come back to claim it. Until then let's learn to be frugal. A mason jar filled with spare pocket change also collects lint and hair and small skin particles of friends and strangers. Let's learn how to love within the means of these small bone cages. Save solitary drops of sweat and stray eyelashes, the dried specks of mascara and summer freckles collected on cheeks. So when the time comes we can pay back this long line of gray men in suits who clutch fat folders of financial records to their chests to keep them from spilling open.
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Apr 30, 2017
Apr 30, 2017 at 12:27 AM UTC
With Every Gift I Think of My Debt
How familiar this dark feeling of being given the gift only to wake from the mist of a dream and find only torn wrapping paper. Know that when you touch my hand a comparably sized fist of energy lifts my rib like a window blind and wakes a tired muscle from dissolution. The horizon in the West is a golden peach but only through the lens of smog which tells us this beautiful lie in apology for its slow caress of death. Some of us were born to spread a terrible disease and can only hope to dress in colorful beads of opal, purple lilac, and quartz lest we let it feed on our own unbecoming. I will not say I have not carried a sickness all my life -- dragged this rotten sack of fruit through the dirt in hopes of reaching the earth's end to roll it off into the infinite black.
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Apr 30, 2017
Apr 30, 2017 at 12:10 AM UTC
Earth's End
I. I am the word in your chest you can't scrap from bone. I am home with the lights low and doors latched shut. II. I am the lettering of your name etched electric in the brain. I am a whisper of crab grass with dandelion breath. III. At night ( ) distant stars, a soft glow from years past. You are the dreamer in bed who wakes in the womb of amnesia. IV. I am reflection in glass and water and stone. You are ( ) crack of dry dirt. V. These moments( ) written years ( ) before your birth. VI. ( ) are the yellow bruise ( ) I ( ) the skin ( ) VII. ( ) light ( ) does not travel. ( ) it remembers all we have forgotten.
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Jun 2, 2011
Jun 2, 2011 at 9:08 PM UTC
What We Have Forgotten
The snow has been falling for a few days or years now. It drops from the pines in white plumes, needles shoot out from the glaze of ice. Did you know in 1849 a snowflake fell from the Scottish sky twenty feet wide and shattered cloud glass across the frozen ground? Right now the radio says parallel dimensions may exist while I realize I need to put another notch in my belt to keep my jeans from falling to the floor -- to keep distant suns within reach. Did you know one scientist suggested the universe is a giant crystal growing in a five- dimensional liquid? I try to picture its jagged edges swelling through time, the snow falling in clusters while the tea kettle hisses steam and the television talks just a little too fast. I take out the pocket knife and lay the belt on the ***** floor and dishes and snow piling up around cars and door- ways, and empty bottles and cans, ***** t-shirts, crumpled papers, pots and pans. The knife sinks into leather and creates a hole to hug closer to my waist -- to hug myself into orbit and anchor myself to the earth. Did you know: When I was younger the sun would shine the flakes together into a thin sheet of ice we could walk on. The light's reflection was sharp -- with eyes closed we took slow steps above all the small pieces that would soon melt, not wanting to break the illusion of our height, feet above the ground, on a gleaming surface that could give way at any moment.
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Jun 2, 2011
Jun 2, 2011 at 9:04 PM UTC
Above the Snow
The shuffle of feet to an out of time drum beat. Sweat and stink, shoulder to shoulder is what they'll remember when they pay seven bucks for a wrist band stuck to arm hair, and a marker stain on the back of the hand like a black badge. Tomorrow no one will remember how guitar fuzz cut like a razor or the bass burst in their chests, because when the last note decays in the back of the bar, all the kids will have is a ring in their ears, and a scratch in the throat from a sound dug deep into elbow bruise and beer can crush. Tomorrow they will hear it, when paper tears from wrist, when ink is washed from hands, when feedback is faded and speaker hiss cut.
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Apr 26, 2011
Apr 26, 2011 at 8:20 PM UTC
Mosh Pit
The bar is slick with liquor and the lacquered wood is worn where elbows rub and beer froths over. I have spent my last dollar on cheap whiskey that clings to the back of my throat long after I've left into the snow and slush of winter streets, holding onto some sort of temporary beauty that weaves through the threads of traffic lights and glistens on the sidewalk, like a gold coin that fades with the night.
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Apr 26, 2011
Apr 26, 2011 at 8:19 PM UTC
Leftover Change
You're all drawn curtain and door hinge creak she told me. Fogged mirror crack and cold window draft. Drool drain drip and refrigerator politics. She told me to shape up. You're all washing machine spin, dry skin and old record skip. She told me to listen up. You're all click of the lock and ring of the phone. Carpet stain sore she told me. All bedsheet crease, alright, all mine.
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Apr 2, 2011
Apr 2, 2011 at 7:50 AM UTC
She Told Me