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VAHouser
VAHouser
30/F/Pennsylvania, USA An old child, weaving on and off the writing path.
Perceived perfection So untouchable Desperation grasping Yet held far out of reach Cherished in heartbreak Preserved beyond embrace Separation prevents Defamation A sacrifice With nothing gained Presumed paltry Defective at distance Horrid by the mile Yet proximity brings tranquility Intimacy that Mends the mirror Seals the cracks Rudimentary becomes Paragon A sacrifice Which gains everything
0
Apr 17, 2020
Apr 17, 2020 at 8:18 PM UTC
forms of love
Every day we'd sit to the soothing voice of the afro man, dabbing his brush into happy little bushes. Now those happy little accidents are gone far away from you, so far, his 'fro seems nothing more than a bush on the side of the road. Describing his wispy voice, the gentle stroke of his brush brings a vague smile, but only just, a mimic of the joy that comes to my lips as I reminisce, selfishly before you. A child then, I barely knew my colors; yet you helped me bloom a rainbow garden. And when I knew my colors well, you embraced the forests I drew in blue, the models of spacecraft from distant worlds, imagined by foreign minds. I wept only once in front of you, a rare tantrum for a childish thing. You cleared my tears and left me beaming in my new ballcap. Older now, I describe the colors to you; you recall the meaning of two or three. Life has turned you back into a child: screaming outwardly, weeping inwardly. The things you know you should know escape you, things now beyond your comprehension. Decades upon decades you experienced the magic your fingers could bring to the canvas of our lives. The watercolors now bleed into vague puddles of tan, oils run thick and drip, matting the carpet. You tantrum against the loss of yourself as I dab your tears and offer you the hat of my memories to sustain you through the fog laid heavy around your head. So I tell you the story of the afro man, dabbing his brush into happy little bushes, and we navigate this not-so-happy little accident that is you lost on the last leg of your life journey, hoping my smile will stay contagious to you until that last step that breaks the haze and brings you home.
0
Apr 17, 2020
Apr 17, 2020 at 1:41 PM UTC
tears
Every day we'd sit to the soothing voice of the afro man, dabbing his brush into happy little bushes. Now those happy little accidents are gone far away from you, so far, his 'fro seems nothing more than a bush on the side of the road. Describing his wispy voice, the gentle stroke of his brush brings a vague smile, but only just, a mimic of the joy that comes to my lips as I reminisce, selfishly before you. A child then, I barely knew my colors; yet you helped me bloom a rainbow garden. And when I knew my colors well, you embraced the forests I drew in blue, the models of spacecraft from distant worlds, imagined by foreign minds. I wept only once in front of you, a rare tantrum for a childish thing. You cleared my tears and left me beaming in my new ballcap. Older now, I describe the colors to you; you recall the meaning of two or three. Life has turned you back into a child: screaming outwardly, weeping inwardly. The things you know you should know escape you, things now beyond your comprehension. Decades upon decades you experienced the magic your fingers could bring to the canvas of our lives. The watercolors now bleed into vague puddles of tan, oils run thick and drip, matting the carpet. You tantrum against the loss of yourself as I dab your tears and offer you the hat of my memories to sustain you through the fog laid heavy around your head. So I tell you the story of the afro man, dabbing his brush into happy little bushes, and we navigate this not-so-happy little accident that is you lost on the last leg of your life journey, hoping my smile will stay contagious to you until that last step that breaks the haze and brings you home.
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76
I always had an affinity for bones. Unbending, able to hold up the weight of lives, bodies, souls. Supportive, yet thankless, with little to show for it but stress marks and fractures. The occasional splash of calcium to feign appreciation and sustain them. At least until the flesh gives in to the parasitic bites of time, Forgotten among skeletal strangers until they snap or are exhumed. I always wanted to be a bone. Or perhaps it terrified me that it is my fate. To be defined only by the context made by those around me. Excavating them from the landscape of their peers became a hobby. I considered making a career out of it for a time, but, well, they try so hard to be the dirt, you end up chipping right through them, giving what little they have left to the flesh that feeds off their surroundings. And since they prefer to be dirt anyway, putting them back together only amplifies the guilt. A futile puzzle against nature. Identifying their remains only unites them in mortal solidarity with the dirt they beg to be. Tarnished crystal skulls impaired by the liquid brains they once sheltered from birth. I chose finally to polish those cherished bones found by others, pulled from the earth by reverent force. A bone in denial, polishing other bones, posing ourselves to fit the mold of newly defined flesh in the open air. Bent and rebirthed against will, finally celebrated with nothing left to show.
0
Apr 13, 2020
Apr 13, 2020 at 12:09 PM UTC
bones