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aaron-kerman
aaron-kerman
33/M/American Hi. Here are some words. May Peace be with you.
Close to this end you were a free-spirit caged Body-bound parlyzed, muted and muzzeled, entombed locked alive and screaming from a keyless cell. A fleshy coffin-with-a-view, an unburied object of pity on public display. Further from this end you were daughter, sister, friend, wife, mother. More. You will always be so much more. Leading up to this end you showed me a suffering so completely devestating I can't bear to think of it. I can't bear to speak of it. A suffering I could never endure myself. A suffering I can't understand or imagine, and hopefully never experience. A suffering I had been praying your release from for years. A suffering you had been pleading your release from for years. A suffering that thankfully you are now released from. It is a suffering I will never forget, that you alone endured. I had never known strength until I witnessed your strength through your suffering. Here at this end I know real loss. It is a loss I cannot possibly bear, but will. Using a strength that is not mine, but yours.
0
Dec 28, 2019
Dec 28, 2019 at 2:00 PM UTC
Here at this End (a eulogy)
The summer's day sun died; drenched, drowned, felled beneath golden water of a past fall's horizon; set. The trees' ephemeral amber leaves. To flames as it expired autumn's bright seer burned the world a dark and chill, ever failing to stay the approaching night beneath. Golden water of a past fall's horizon strained, swelled, rose to greet winter's ashen moon who left earth- for a moment- a frozen visage. Ever failing to stay, the approaching night   ebbed, revealed spring rains and summer heat before flowing again to autumn's golden twilight.  That harvest sun, who left earth for a moment, a frozen visage in the heavens now it seems, begins once more to wane. The summer's day- sun-dyed drenched and drowned- felled again to autumn's golden twilight.  That harvest sun sets the trees' ephemeral amber leaves -to flame- as it expires.
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Sep 23, 2011
Sep 23, 2011 at 3:54 PM UTC
felled.
I lie- Not from a beating heart, bleeding and breaking always for the cynic in all of us, for the human spirit's relentless wane between birth and death, *but from the bottom of a mind unburdened by feelings of empathy or loss I hide* behind deep mahogany eyes, the ones you whispered shone through to illuminate my soul which was a dinghy lost at sea, a quiet storm or the full moon reflected off a placid lake at night. If I were honest I'd tell you that I only see reflections of myself in others eyes, the world a pallor shade of something not quite discernible and not quite good; I'd say the lies I will never convince myself of are the truths you use to fall asleep at night. You said I was enlightened. You said my mind was beautiful. You said you wished you could see the world as I do.... The grass is not greener. The scene from where I'm standing is dim and growing darker. True love is... and it is truth, and my truth is a world of melancholy grays, memories of all the things that have ever hurt and a forgiveness in which I hope to claim solace. My love is: never forgetting that I've been undeserving; rising each morning in a place devoid of hue or tint only to keep up appearances and expectations; The beautiful lies I whisper as you drift off to sleep... The lies I make you believe just to save you from the truth... To to save you from me. - because I love you.
0
Sep 20, 2011
Sep 20, 2011 at 6:22 PM UTC
Love... the way I lie.
Life is bigger- than you; me- you treading mire choosing these heavy eyed tragedies over religion me holding on so tightly to that comforting distance always- In my eyes the comedy is that I'm losing these confessions once spoken- I say so much under covers throwing faith  at empathetic shadows. Can't we hear our better demons? Feel sympathies? God's abandoned as we protest a dismal fantasy over truth- and off our knees we use cold notions of what's "real"... like fools- Our ironic hint towards the centuries as we lose our religion- trading flaws for other flaws Pretending all the time God was just a dream.
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Aug 27, 2011
Aug 27, 2011 at 10:28 AM UTC
Michael Stipes (losing our religion)
Each night, which engulfs the day,- like the ocean's tide Rolls over sand, like death envelops life, both timely and blessed- Washes us away to reveal who we are. From him we can not hide. Still we attempt, we turn, we face inside ourselves. We confide In no one, in fear that others will soil our dreams. We detest Each night, which engulfs the day like the ocean's tide. The Son of Man was nailed to a cross and died. He chose to abide A God he had never seen but believed in. A God he confessed Washes us away and reveals who we are. From Him we can not hide. Yet we are condemned by our choice, our power to decide What is wrong from what is right. Which is why we can not rest Each night, which engulfs the day like the ocean's tide. We hope that when we look back at our lives we can say we've tried To turn ourselves around. I've heard that at our final hour fear of death Washes us away to reveal who we are. From him we can not hide. All three noblemen: the darkness, he who defied Death, and that black angel himself hold our souls within their ******* Each knight- engulfs the days like the ocean's tide Rolls over sand, like death envelops life, all timley and blessed- Washes us away to reveal who we are. From Him we can not hide.
0
Jul 28, 2010
Jul 28, 2010 at 12:03 PM UTC
Found
Crimson comes to those that wait but gold it never does Nights in neon hazes on ***** bar stools transient coffins on sticky floors Snatching seraphim from pipe dream myths Wishes come true at the worst moments, through jaded smiles + Another round we lie, from our mouths, these glossy eyes Sacrifice nothing to the looking The walking dead speak with conviction of their so called lives Lived in palor boxes and unbalenced columns where they Die each week, come full circle to us fo-cherubs In hopes of being reborn.
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Jul 24, 2010
Jul 24, 2010 at 8:18 AM UTC
Colors and Shapes
We met in the Red Square at Midnight. Sitting on the austere steps of the Kremlin We drank Stolichnaya in silence; listened to St. Basil’s Bells stoic ringing until Our sun rose pale over Moscow   Beauty is created when I press your mulatto skin to mine. We shift. You move, and as you’re moved you move me. Our motion akin to your mother’s in a gentle breeze or a dancer; Some Elise pirouetting et fouetter and falling over graceful infinities.     I am deliberate during this ballet. Subdominant. Una corda e sostenuto, and as you request so do you respond; relaxed, Sustaining single notes; soft into that ethereal Moonlight… Blurred and blunted, your perfect meter dampened by my learned cadence.      As you sound off forte I rock slightly forward, coming into you harder. We breathe sharp together; my fingertips caressing you legato; My Ana Magdalena. Andantino; rolling into flurries of crescendos presto allegro climaxing; Capitulating again before we rest… Before lento diminuendo.                                                                       We courted at the Konig Von Ungarn in Vienna. It was classical and   romantic. Baroque. We fell in love. At Figaro’s wedding we tasted sangria as the stars Set, pastel, over Seville. Our first kiss was the Holy Roman Empire fading; A footnote under bass cleft. We were married in the Rhineland, a single Canon announcing our nuptial. You a Riesling and I your lattice. I stood firm, resolute, as you grew in, around, and from me. But the lords, they taint you, they **** me of your fruits; oblivious, they invoke their subtle prima nocta.                             From the rooftops and the gutters they hear you. A virtue is lost between us. We shift. They are unwelcome eavesdroppers’ playing ******   They come and gather round us and I grow nervous, stiff; sweat falling from my brow to your ebony and ivory. They move provocative, but they do not care; they do not notice us.                             I stop as they begin. They’re discourteous during this Can-can. Their  praise and kind words may arouse the pimps and ****** wandering Montmartre into Paris’s red-light,  “Hear,” they fall on deaf ears. This is no Moulin Rouge. We are not meant to be exhibitionists and yet we yield to their flat appeals.                                                                                     I put my clothes back on, Rags is all they are, and you, you’ve become stark. I project my discontent through your string and hammer heart; I slap your toothy face and stomp your sterling feet without relent. I-De-tach-My-self-From-You. Staccato. They call me Inventive and as they sip their whiskey, their bourbons and their Texas Tea they tell us that we have Entertained.         We build our home from the precious stones of foreign countries. We traverse ages to reach the mines and the rock fields, finding rough Diamonds and sapphires. Naked, we wash them in ether; they luster. The noblemen come. They smile and applaud as they peep through the Windows and knock at the doors, but We shall not  be moved.
0
Jan 18, 2010
Jan 18, 2010 at 10:29 AM UTC
1st Movement in A major. (for piano)
We met in the Red Square at Midnight. Sitting on the austere steps of the Kremlin We drank Stolichnaya in silence; listened to St. Basil’s Bells stoic ringing until Our sun rose pale over Moscow   Beauty is created when I press your mulatto skin to mine. We shift. You move, and as you’re moved you move me. Our motion akin to your mother’s in a gentle breeze or a dancer; Some Elise pirouetting et fouetter and falling over graceful infinities.     I am deliberate during this ballet. Subdominant. Una corda e sostenuto, and as you request so do you respond; relaxed, Sustaining single notes; soft into that ethereal Moonlight… Blurred and blunted, your perfect meter dampened by my learned cadence.      As you sound off forte I rock slightly forward, coming into you harder. We breathe sharp together; my fingertips caressing you legato; My Ana Magdalena. Andantino; rolling into flurries of crescendos presto allegro climaxing; Capitulating again before we rest… Before lento diminuendo.                                                                       We courted at the Konig Von Ungarn in Vienna. It was classical and   romantic. Baroque. We fell in love. At Figaro’s wedding we tasted sangria as the stars Set, pastel, over Seville. Our first kiss was the Holy Roman Empire fading; A footnote under bass cleft. We were married in the Rhineland, a single Canon announcing our nuptial. You a Riesling and I your lattice. I stood firm, resolute, as you grew in, around, and from me. But the lords, they taint you, they **** me of your fruits; oblivious, they invoke their subtle prima nocta.                             From the rooftops and the gutters they hear you. A virtue is lost between us. We shift. They are unwelcome eavesdroppers’ playing ******   They come and gather round us and I grow nervous, stiff; sweat falling from my brow to your ebony and ivory. They move provocative, but they do not care; they do not notice us.                             I stop as they begin. They’re discourteous during this Can-can. Their  praise and kind words may arouse the pimps and ****** wandering Montmartre into Paris’s red-light,  “Hear,” they fall on deaf ears. This is no Moulin Rouge. We are not meant to be exhibitionists and yet we yield to their flat appeals.                                                                                     I put my clothes back on, Rags is all they are, and you, you’ve become stark. I project my discontent through your string and hammer heart; I slap your toothy face and stomp your sterling feet without relent. I-De-tach-My-self-From-You. Staccato. They call me Inventive and as they sip their whiskey, their bourbons and their Texas Tea they tell us that we have Entertained.         We build our home from the precious stones of foreign countries. We traverse ages to reach the mines and the rock fields, finding rough Diamonds and sapphires. Naked, we wash them in ether; they luster. The noblemen come. They smile and applaud as they peep through the Windows and knock at the doors, but We shall not  be moved.
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31
“Everybody has won, and all must have prizes.”- Alice in Wonderland “Everyone knows it’s a race, but no one’s sure of the finish line.” -Dean Young, “Whale Watch” 1a Children rarely listen to any armchair advice from their immediate family, relatives they commonly have contact with or anyone they haven’t known for more than a couple years because in kindergarten or day care they often got gold stars just for showing up… Little glittering prizes plastered on poster boards in elementary school classrooms regardless of grades or mistakes… 1b On the windy day when you lower the green jet-ski instead of the good one, race it to the north end, out of the safety of the bay, into the choppy waters, you’ll get bullied by the wave’s splash like the cattails of a whip. The lake will overwhelm you; you’ll inhale some of the water, a sharp pain will course through your body as you try to breathe those short shallow breaths, which you will force yourself to do as seldom as possible. You will cough and keel over on the craft; It’s not uncommon to spit up blood; you will have to return to the dock and raise the jet-ski back onto the boatlift. You will stub your toe on the cracks in the planking, stumble and get a splinter in the ball of your foot heading towards the deck but won’t notice. All feeling numbs against water trapped inside your lungs. 1c Jackie Paper’s mother made him a hotdog with potato chips and served it to him on a plastic plate outside so he could enjoy it on the newly refinished deck while he watched the schooners and speedboats, stingray’s and ski-nautique’s jet in and out of the bay. He didn’t wait five minutes after he finished to fly from the deck onto the dock into the water where he free styled too far and got a cramp. His mother almost lost a son that day. 2a If wet some recommend running around the shore of the lake until the air has thoroughly dried you off. Listening to the gulls dive and racing through the varying levels of grass on the neighbors’ unkempt lawns, in between the oaks and elms, keeping ever mindful the sticks and stones and acorns that litter the ground in lieu of stubbed toes or splinters. You will most likely fail, but you will get dry. 2b When you **** your big toe on the zebra mussels while wading in the shallows, near the seawall beside the dock, trying to catch crayfish and minnows darting between the stones underneath the water, and the blood doesn’t stop flowing for 10 minutes and the H2O2 bubbles burgundy on the decks maple woodwork, instead of that off white color it usually bubbles, and stings something awful, don’t be a little ***** about it. It’s your own fault for leaving your aqua-socks on the green marbled tiles in the foyer closet next to the bathroom; where you changed into your bathing suit and got the bottle of peroxide. 2c Last winter Christopher Robbins drove his red pickup on the ice (near the island, towards the North end, where even when it’s been freezing for weeks the frozen water seldom exceeds six inches in thickness) at night and fell through. He felt the cold water enter his lungs. Although it was snowing and no one had noticed he survived; it took him the whole of an hour to reach the nearest house and call home; he lost his truck and suffered from severe hypothermia and acute pneumonia. At the hospital it was determined that while there was ample evidence of the early onset of frostbite in his extremities, amputation would not be necessary. 3a While sitting Indian style on the dock next to your friends, settled on the plastic furniture, sipping whiskey and beer, comparing scars assume, no matter whose company you’re in, that yours are the smallest. Those cigarette burns running down the length of your right forearm are self-inflicted and old- reminders that you haven’t had to force yourself to breathe in quite some time. 3b When you jump off the end of the dock you’ll forget to keep your knees loose because you were running on the wooden planks trying to avoid the white weather worn and dirtied dock chairs and worrying about getting a splinter. The water is inviting but during the summer the depth is only three feet four inches. You will roll your ankle at the very least and probably sprain it because, Like an ******* you locked your knees and jumped without looking. 3c Two summers ago Alice was tubing behind a blue Crown Royal when she hit the wake at an awkward angle and flew head first into the water in the bay a few hundred feet off the dock at dusk. The spotter and driver simply weren’t watching and the wave-runner didn’t see her due to the advancing darkness. She cracked her head open on the bottom of its hull; swallowed water. She needed 70 stitches and several staples but Alice made a full recovery. 4 Mothers often tell their children to should chew their food 40 times before swallowing to aid digestion and to wait a full half hour after eating before engaging in physical activity. Especially swimming. 5 When you’re at the lake house this summer skipping stones swimming and running on the dock remember not to listen to any advice. If this were a race to get dry you’d be much closer to first than last. The internal bleeding eventually stops. The splinters all get pulled out, staples and stitches are removed, lacerations heal and the feeling returns to the fingers and toes. The water eventually drains from the lungs and only the scars remain: Gold stars on poster boards; because everybody has won, and all must have prizes.
0
Jan 18, 2010
Jan 18, 2010 at 10:10 AM UTC
The Dodo Birds verdict (some advice)
“Everybody has won, and all must have prizes.”- Alice in Wonderland “Everyone knows it’s a race, but no one’s sure of the finish line.” -Dean Young, “Whale Watch” 1a Children rarely listen to any armchair advice from their immediate family, relatives they commonly have contact with or anyone they haven’t known for more than a couple years because in kindergarten or day care they often got gold stars just for showing up… Little glittering prizes plastered on poster boards in elementary school classrooms regardless of grades or mistakes… 1b On the windy day when you lower the green jet-ski instead of the good one, race it to the north end, out of the safety of the bay, into the choppy waters, you’ll get bullied by the wave’s splash like the cattails of a whip. The lake will overwhelm you; you’ll inhale some of the water, a sharp pain will course through your body as you try to breathe those short shallow breaths, which you will force yourself to do as seldom as possible. You will cough and keel over on the craft; It’s not uncommon to spit up blood; you will have to return to the dock and raise the jet-ski back onto the boatlift. You will stub your toe on the cracks in the planking, stumble and get a splinter in the ball of your foot heading towards the deck but won’t notice. All feeling numbs against water trapped inside your lungs. 1c Jackie Paper’s mother made him a hotdog with potato chips and served it to him on a plastic plate outside so he could enjoy it on the newly refinished deck while he watched the schooners and speedboats, stingray’s and ski-nautique’s jet in and out of the bay. He didn’t wait five minutes after he finished to fly from the deck onto the dock into the water where he free styled too far and got a cramp. His mother almost lost a son that day. 2a If wet some recommend running around the shore of the lake until the air has thoroughly dried you off. Listening to the gulls dive and racing through the varying levels of grass on the neighbors’ unkempt lawns, in between the oaks and elms, keeping ever mindful the sticks and stones and acorns that litter the ground in lieu of stubbed toes or splinters. You will most likely fail, but you will get dry. 2b When you **** your big toe on the zebra mussels while wading in the shallows, near the seawall beside the dock, trying to catch crayfish and minnows darting between the stones underneath the water, and the blood doesn’t stop flowing for 10 minutes and the H2O2 bubbles burgundy on the decks maple woodwork, instead of that off white color it usually bubbles, and stings something awful, don’t be a little ***** about it. It’s your own fault for leaving your aqua-socks on the green marbled tiles in the foyer closet next to the bathroom; where you changed into your bathing suit and got the bottle of peroxide. 2c Last winter Christopher Robbins drove his red pickup on the ice (near the island, towards the North end, where even when it’s been freezing for weeks the frozen water seldom exceeds six inches in thickness) at night and fell through. He felt the cold water enter his lungs. Although it was snowing and no one had noticed he survived; it took him the whole of an hour to reach the nearest house and call home; he lost his truck and suffered from severe hypothermia and acute pneumonia. At the hospital it was determined that while there was ample evidence of the early onset of frostbite in his extremities, amputation would not be necessary. 3a While sitting Indian style on the dock next to your friends, settled on the plastic furniture, sipping whiskey and beer, comparing scars assume, no matter whose company you’re in, that yours are the smallest. Those cigarette burns running down the length of your right forearm are self-inflicted and old- reminders that you haven’t had to force yourself to breathe in quite some time. 3b When you jump off the end of the dock you’ll forget to keep your knees loose because you were running on the wooden planks trying to avoid the white weather worn and dirtied dock chairs and worrying about getting a splinter. The water is inviting but during the summer the depth is only three feet four inches. You will roll your ankle at the very least and probably sprain it because, Like an ******* you locked your knees and jumped without looking. 3c Two summers ago Alice was tubing behind a blue Crown Royal when she hit the wake at an awkward angle and flew head first into the water in the bay a few hundred feet off the dock at dusk. The spotter and driver simply weren’t watching and the wave-runner didn’t see her due to the advancing darkness. She cracked her head open on the bottom of its hull; swallowed water. She needed 70 stitches and several staples but Alice made a full recovery. 4 Mothers often tell their children to should chew their food 40 times before swallowing to aid digestion and to wait a full half hour after eating before engaging in physical activity. Especially swimming. 5 When you’re at the lake house this summer skipping stones swimming and running on the dock remember not to listen to any advice. If this were a race to get dry you’d be much closer to first than last. The internal bleeding eventually stops. The splinters all get pulled out, staples and stitches are removed, lacerations heal and the feeling returns to the fingers and toes. The water eventually drains from the lungs and only the scars remain: Gold stars on poster boards; because everybody has won, and all must have prizes.
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30
He held radical light to moon’s somber stare; Night’s bright diminished- Taking backseat in a cab heading polar; Up north and downtown. Somewhere dark. He breathed cold brilliance in; Addict’s winter; snow filled air Yielding melodies to dense beats. Music stopped; Time raced… Erased. He spoke hard liquid through wide eyes; Tongue flailing, Mouth jawing, Body failing, To wet ground. He heard color flash; Blue,         Red, Blue, White,             Red,     Blue,                         White, Red,                         White.            White. White. He felt silence enter. White. White. Black. He held radical light.
0
Jan 18, 2010
Jan 18, 2010 at 10:04 AM UTC
an addicts winter
Jealousy is calling Mrs. Brightside to a dark moon. Werewolf howls: some lost girl, lonely, Wanting only to be loved. Let me scream for she is lost. ‘Cause never found outside, in cold, damp rooms; Body tossing, Sweat staining the sheets, Soaking the pillows She cries... Just to be heard, Just so she might breathe. Cry for Her... Lost Innocence. Purity forgotten can never be expressed, Only bottled up, Distilled, Filled to the brim to be poured out then thrown To the ocean- Awaiting time may bring beach glass, Smoothed rough and shattered softened- In hopes of sparkling some distant shore. But to belie Her: these empty vessels; Silhouettes among a crowd of unfamiliar faces Identically backlit by the sun-Vivid Death- Setting, Turned westward, Watching an amber light’s slow fade- Crimson turqouise violet splendor- To black. Let me scream for You. Let me scream, For you are lost. Let me scream for your lost cause; I will scream forever,      And forever            let me pray for you in silence And speak soft down whispers into the depth of vacant ears Well-known strangers wandering empty streets, Lighting sidewalks and store windows as they pass -Sometimes- Waking cold sweat screaming through darkness; Tears for Bright Dreams- Now only Lost Causes. And the day begins to break. The lights go out.- She cries, “Go out”- Extinguishes. My freedom’s lost. My innocence wanes. She cries. Ransoms collected. I lay silent… She cries. Screaming, She cries. Silently I cry, And you begin to fade away.
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Jan 18, 2010
Jan 18, 2010 at 10:01 AM UTC
Dreams
Jealousy is calling Mrs. Brightside to a dark moon. Werewolf howls: some lost girl, lonely, Wanting only to be loved. Let me scream for she is lost. ‘Cause never found outside, in cold, damp rooms; Body tossing, Sweat staining the sheets, Soaking the pillows She cries... Just to be heard, Just so she might breathe. Cry for Her... Lost Innocence. Purity forgotten can never be expressed, Only bottled up, Distilled, Filled to the brim to be poured out then thrown To the ocean- Awaiting time may bring beach glass, Smoothed rough and shattered softened- In hopes of sparkling some distant shore. But to belie Her: these empty vessels; Silhouettes among a crowd of unfamiliar faces Identically backlit by the sun-Vivid Death- Setting, Turned westward, Watching an amber light’s slow fade- Crimson turqouise violet splendor- To black. Let me scream for You. Let me scream, For you are lost. Let me scream for your lost cause; I will scream forever,      And forever            let me pray for you in silence And speak soft down whispers into the depth of vacant ears Well-known strangers wandering empty streets, Lighting sidewalks and store windows as they pass -Sometimes- Waking cold sweat screaming through darkness; Tears for Bright Dreams- Now only Lost Causes. And the day begins to break. The lights go out.- She cries, “Go out”- Extinguishes. My freedom’s lost. My innocence wanes. She cries. Ransoms collected. I lay silent… She cries. Screaming, She cries. Silently I cry, And you begin to fade away.
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