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TheTimorousBeastie
20/F/Tennessee
What if You wake up one day And learn That you loved wrong?
0
Apr 23, 2019
Apr 23, 2019 at 1:43 AM UTC
Loved wrong..
“I’m writing this somewhere secret, and green, and  beautiful.. Sparkling water and intoxicating seclusion That I should be drinking in with relief. But all I can think of is how badly I wish you were here with me to share in this solitude. We could wander for hours amongst blossoming weeds, and forget what happened that left us bereft”
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Apr 23, 2019
Apr 23, 2019 at 1:39 AM UTC
Out by the secret pond
She took a romantic, A real lovers dream, And made him a cynic. Made the soft spoken scream. And now all is visible , Yes everythings clear. We know why she's miserable, And sitting in fear. She broke him, she crushed him. She made him like her. She ripped out his diamond, and replaced it with coal. She was a cynic. Who woke up in screams. He made her romantic. and taught her to dream. So now they're divisible, And walking from here. He's healing and careful, And changing his gear. He broke her, he crushed her, He made her like him. She's softer & kinder but a new broken within.
0
Apr 23, 2019
Apr 23, 2019 at 1:06 AM UTC
When the soft spoken scream
VI. I, Ophelia ______________________________________________________________ {The Drowning} It was her-- Flower Child. Weeping Woman. Crazed Ophelia-- who taught me that the drowning is in the letting go and not in the doing. Ophelia did not flee to the riverside with the intention of drowning herself, no-- it was merely a promise of bouquets-- daisies, violet, rosemary,  rue-- of wild, velveteen petals nestled softly against tear-stained cheekbones; pine needles-- ticklish-- beneath raw feet (do you recall how The Little Mermaid danced upon knives in the name of true love?); and the train of her nightgown a focal point for dewy leaves and frayed bird feathers. For it was flying she thought of as she climbed the scarred willow and cradled herself atop its highest bough, severed blossoms in hand, legs dangling precariously over blustering currents. But when the bough b r o k e , the cradle did   f                               a                                ­   l                                       l, and down came mad girl cradle and all. But you must understand-- the dismemberment of the willow's flailing limbs was not her doing; when the rapids dragged her down to the belly of the murky river bed, she merely gave no struggle as death lapped at her ribs-- she merely submitted, allowed the snivelling maw of the river to swallow her whole. Now, I think it suiting that I ponder the demise of the Flower Child (wilted in her ruin); Weeping Woman (tears reunited with the eye of the water lily); Crazed Ophelia (forgotten) and all she has taught me of drowning as I let myself fall asleep in the bathtub at three o clock in the morning, all the while a little drunk and so very sad. (You'd might have even thought I wanted to drown myself. ) ___________________________________________________________ {The Resurrection} Doused in the pallid wash of blue stage light, and the clamour of imaginary tides growling in my ears, I metamorphosize into Hamlet's Ophelia and all the other Ophelias who came before me-- mad. broken. lost. women. Women who were never capable of quieting the sea trembling in their veins; the barbaric deluge festering within their souls; the siren songs musing to the cavernous twists of their hearts, piercing through artery with stalagmite precision. These women succumbed,   not to the water, but to the burden of their own desire. love. heartbreak. None of them survived. Except for me, of course. And, I must admit, it took my writing this poem to finally understand why that is-- why-- how-- I have managed to stay alive, despite dreaming of that same siren song that lured my foremothers to their destructions. See, alone, Ophelia could not weather   the tempest seething over her. But I different-- I am not alone. Because I carry with me the spirits of all the Ophelias who came before me, the fragments of their beings melding together to create a brilliant gossamer of hope. And that is why, together, we can breathe underwater. ______________________________________________________________ {Blackout} Ophelia Bows, her performance immortalized through the remembrance of a standing ovation.
0
Feb 19, 2019
Feb 19, 2019 at 5:11 PM UTC
I, Ophelia (Part Six--I, Ophelia)
VI. I, Ophelia ______________________________________________________________ {The Drowning} It was her-- Flower Child. Weeping Woman. Crazed Ophelia-- who taught me that the drowning is in the letting go and not in the doing. Ophelia did not flee to the riverside with the intention of drowning herself, no-- it was merely a promise of bouquets-- daisies, violet, rosemary,  rue-- of wild, velveteen petals nestled softly against tear-stained cheekbones; pine needles-- ticklish-- beneath raw feet (do you recall how The Little Mermaid danced upon knives in the name of true love?); and the train of her nightgown a focal point for dewy leaves and frayed bird feathers. For it was flying she thought of as she climbed the scarred willow and cradled herself atop its highest bough, severed blossoms in hand, legs dangling precariously over blustering currents. But when the bough b r o k e , the cradle did   f                               a                                ­   l                                       l, and down came mad girl cradle and all. But you must understand-- the dismemberment of the willow's flailing limbs was not her doing; when the rapids dragged her down to the belly of the murky river bed, she merely gave no struggle as death lapped at her ribs-- she merely submitted, allowed the snivelling maw of the river to swallow her whole. Now, I think it suiting that I ponder the demise of the Flower Child (wilted in her ruin); Weeping Woman (tears reunited with the eye of the water lily); Crazed Ophelia (forgotten) and all she has taught me of drowning as I let myself fall asleep in the bathtub at three o clock in the morning, all the while a little drunk and so very sad. (You'd might have even thought I wanted to drown myself. ) ___________________________________________________________ {The Resurrection} Doused in the pallid wash of blue stage light, and the clamour of imaginary tides growling in my ears, I metamorphosize into Hamlet's Ophelia and all the other Ophelias who came before me-- mad. broken. lost. women. Women who were never capable of quieting the sea trembling in their veins; the barbaric deluge festering within their souls; the siren songs musing to the cavernous twists of their hearts, piercing through artery with stalagmite precision. These women succumbed,   not to the water, but to the burden of their own desire. love. heartbreak. None of them survived. Except for me, of course. And, I must admit, it took my writing this poem to finally understand why that is-- why-- how-- I have managed to stay alive, despite dreaming of that same siren song that lured my foremothers to their destructions. See, alone, Ophelia could not weather   the tempest seething over her. But I different-- I am not alone. Because I carry with me the spirits of all the Ophelias who came before me, the fragments of their beings melding together to create a brilliant gossamer of hope. And that is why, together, we can breathe underwater. ______________________________________________________________ {Blackout} Ophelia Bows, her performance immortalized through the remembrance of a standing ovation.
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