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amanda-fawcett
amanda-fawcett
American
The music man in my family Has fingers made of piano keys I hear his songs throughout the house Speaking the language That bleeds through him From his father's early bassoon notes And mother's late night flute whispers And there it is: The language of the music man Swirling Jumping Freedom sounds That tinker up the walls And through the vents And pipes of our house All from the piano key fingers Of our music man.
0
Mar 12, 2013
Mar 12, 2013 at 1:56 AM UTC
The Music Man
like waves in the air, poetry is a scream in the forest, the pebble on the beach, the utterance of a soul, scribbled in black, and signed with red.
0
Mar 11, 2013
Mar 11, 2013 at 8:37 PM UTC
a poem
Quietly I rose on a Sunday morning, wrapped my hair up above my tired face, and slid slippers onto tired feet. I was welcomed by the sound of parents discussing gently the beauty of half-and-half with warm mugs snugly in their palms. After all this time, they still have coffee every morning in the pale blue of Seattle rain. After all this time, they still laugh at the jokes they've heard for twenty years. Through all these twists and breaks, they still laugh. I sit nearby with toast, the butter melting slowly diving into the dips and kinks of the hot brown bread. And I sit. Quietly. Listening to the joy of parents, of best friends, and I think of all the years I have ahead, all the kinds of people I will meet, and loves I will find, but none will mean as much as those two with warm mugs snugly in their palms. I will come back years from now, pains from now, loves from now, asking for that half-and-half and those ancient jokes. Nothing means as much.
0
Mar 11, 2013
Mar 11, 2013 at 8:05 PM UTC
Nothing means as much
hello stranger, how long has it been since we last met? it must have been just last week when we sat on the bench and fed the birds. that’s when we last met. that sounds about right. i wonder where you went. we used to meet here every day. it began when i was strolling in the park you were feeding the birds wearing everything you owned and carrying the rest in a rusty shopping cart. And when you held your hand out with the tin cup resting in your palm I reached to give a coin but you were handing me instead a cup filled with brown seeds. You asked me to sit with you. we said nothing and it was enough. your wrinkled old man hands folded gently around your cup of oats. toss toss they fell to the cold concrete the birds snapped at them peck peck your gift to the world for giving you nothing. hello stranger how long has it been since we last talked? it must have been a few days when you explained to me the tale of your misfortunate soul. that sounds about right a few days ago since we sat back on that splitered, oak bench but this time with the scraps of paper faces printed on them in sepia gold tones with rounded smiles. photos of your family you told me of the days you wasted without them. they're now gone your only gift from the world. stranger? i wonder where you went. you told me of your plans to leave this empire, skyscraper prison. i never thought you would, sorry to admit it. maybe I will never know where you went, or maybe you were never there. but i still go to that bench and toss the oats on cold concrete for the homeless birds peck peck they remind me of you goodbye, stranger.
0
Mar 7, 2013
Mar 7, 2013 at 9:41 PM UTC
hello, stranger
hello stranger, how long has it been since we last met? it must have been just last week when we sat on the bench and fed the birds. that’s when we last met. that sounds about right. i wonder where you went. we used to meet here every day. it began when i was strolling in the park you were feeding the birds wearing everything you owned and carrying the rest in a rusty shopping cart. And when you held your hand out with the tin cup resting in your palm I reached to give a coin but you were handing me instead a cup filled with brown seeds. You asked me to sit with you. we said nothing and it was enough. your wrinkled old man hands folded gently around your cup of oats. toss toss they fell to the cold concrete the birds snapped at them peck peck your gift to the world for giving you nothing. hello stranger how long has it been since we last talked? it must have been a few days when you explained to me the tale of your misfortunate soul. that sounds about right a few days ago since we sat back on that splitered, oak bench but this time with the scraps of paper faces printed on them in sepia gold tones with rounded smiles. photos of your family you told me of the days you wasted without them. they're now gone your only gift from the world. stranger? i wonder where you went. you told me of your plans to leave this empire, skyscraper prison. i never thought you would, sorry to admit it. maybe I will never know where you went, or maybe you were never there. but i still go to that bench and toss the oats on cold concrete for the homeless birds peck peck they remind me of you goodbye, stranger.
Continue reading...
69
some people look at the world from behind a glass. and some look at it from behind the glass of another. there should be value in this, but glass is just glass, and people are just broken wine glasses. so I guess it’s all the same no matter how we look at it.
0
Mar 7, 2013
Mar 7, 2013 at 9:19 PM UTC
through the glass
It's blinding how many stars there are. Not just millions, but trillions of blazing specks that are just floating, burning in absolute nothing. And they do it for no reason, there's no goal that unites them, no yoking drive or resolution other than the pure instinct to just do, to just be. And despite all this purposelessness they still burn with the hottest of fire, unfathomable fire. Kinda makes me jealous. But somehow people only wonder how. In fact, they dedicate their short lives just to answering that one tiny question about these things we see at night. But what I'm wondering is why. Why so many? Why trillions of these things just there burning? You'd think we ought to have figured it out by now.
0
Mar 7, 2013
Mar 7, 2013 at 9:16 PM UTC
twinkle twinkle
You asked me how I am doing and I said “Good” You asked me to be honest and I said “I’m fine” You told me to expand. I replied, "I'm not good at all. And I want that to be simple enough. I'm not being exaggerative or selfish or birthing drama for drama's sake. It's just that I am here. Here on silly earth, And I feel alone at crossroads in my life. I am under no illusion of my incredibly blessed or undeserving existence. But that's just the problem. LIFE is starting now. And for the first time, I have had to make choices choices on my own choices that (according to mother) will shape who I fundamentally become as a human. So that's a bit distracting. ‘You need to remember not to let people down.’ ‘You should consider how you love someone, not just when to.’ ‘You ought to be more assertive or it'll all come crashing down.’ She reminds me of my uncontrollable imperfection on a daily basis Not necessarily through her words I doubt she wants to inflict this on me. But the way way she stares at me sometimes from across the room. Silently. Like she’s trying to admire a painting that secretly no one quite appreciates or understands but everyone seems to find profound meaning in it so you go along with the show. Which I wouldn't have a problem with if I could wake up refreshed in the morning. And not tired like I am. All the time. I’m tired of being fifteen. Because inside, I don’t feel fifteen. My mind turns on fifty year old gears churning up one hundred year old philosophies. But The age in which I currently must suffer through is misunderstood and incorrectly represented. Teenager is a word parents shudder to hear. A word elders instantly accuse. A word authorities doubt without reasonable basis. The drum pumping my soul is in fact a solo ensemble. But I am naturally clumped in with the lot of marching bands that clash and crash, stomp and slam their drums as they parade the flag of fickle rebellion into the air they barely know. Don’t get me wrong, the stereotypes of my age and time are drawn up from some truth, but one truth shouldn’t result in one outlook. You don’t roll dice with only threes on the faces or only ones. So it is hard to watch as everywhere I go, titles and labels are being stuck into me like toothpicks in a fruit salad. And first of all, just because society cuts me up and breaks me down like a pineapple you can buy with leftover quarters doesn’t mean that I’m up for grabs. And secondly, No one should be branded simply because it is easier to ignore them than to know them. Don’t hear this as a “oh she’s a teenage girl” moment hear this as a “she’s a human and wants to be heard without your filter over her words” moment So, I’m having a hard time with that. Not to mention the rest.” “The rest?” You asked. “You know,” I said, “How I have to decide what school I am going to commit to which is slightly like choosing between your two parents. You can’t pick one happily and freely without knowing what could’ve been if you lived with dad instead. It’s tricky to wake up in the morning. It’s tricky to get out of bed because I know that sooner than later I will either be moving that bed into the basement or into a dorm which won’t be on the campus I really desire because God knows I didn’t save enough pennies for that. My whole future is before me. Almost literally considering the number of pamphlets stapled over the dreams I carved so meticulously out of my ‘mind wood’ with my ‘What do you want to be when you grow up’ knife. So that’s intimidating. And all those “it’ll work itself out” speeches that surround me don’t make the choices suddenly blare across the radio or start blinking from neon signs telling me what to do what to chose what to be. In the end, all those “don’t worry about it” and “you’ll figure it out” do nothing but put a knot in my gut that no amount of research or interviews or Friday night pig outs can untie. Because this stuff, these moments as I build my foundation for my single LIFE with little slippery Lego blocks are not made with cheery hand-outs or inspiring quotes. LIFE is formed by me choosing which Lego brick color choosing which Lego brick shape and of course choosing which people will help me to construct it. It’s tricky It’s messy It’s loud and it makes other things hard to focus on.” “Other things?” You said. “Other things.” I reply. “You know, those books I have to read those graphs I have to draw those tests I have to study for those miles I have to run those words I have to memorize those labs I have to finish those annotations I have to complete those poems I have to parse. Just THOSE. Don’t get me wrong. I don’t mind school Unlike the kids who complain that they are forced to educate themselves. I have no problem learning. In fact, I want to long to. TEACH ME, WORLD! TEACH ME HOW TO UNDERSTAND YOU IN EVERY LANGUAGE I CAN! It’s not the books or the deadlines. It’s the people. Bleh. The people. The cowardly childish people with their smug clothes and horrendous attitudes that you can smell just over the stink of their pomp. Truthfully, I feel for them because they don’t feel for themselves. and because there is little way to prove to these kids that they can be them not doctored them or decorated them the “them” they thrive to be not the “them” they try to be. So I’m surrounded by people icky people whose glares and stares and whispers like cold ghosts leave me too feeling torn between being myself (whatever that even means) and being accepted. I want to be free to try new things, but new things are poison here at school new things are demeaning because they’re demanding. So, I have moments where I say ‘Be you. What does it matter?’ But then when I am alone at the table at the only open table with the last chair the one that squeaks if you rock to the left when I am listening to the music no one knows and reading the book no one chose thinking about the movie even no theater shows that’s when moments of guilt ridden loneliness bring me to say ‘Put yourself away for now. Put in a pin in it. Come back to what you want after you’re done being what society thinks you need.’ Because it is hard to be loved by one sided people it is hard to be loved when the world wants you to say what it wants to hear. Us teenagers think we wear invincibility cloaks So we never have to see those under the invisibility cloaks ‘Don’t question it!’ seems to be the motto of most I meet here. Because who wants to learn, who wants to try if it makes them question their comfort? And of course that all just touches the surface of that other thing. The thing I don’t want to really talk about.” You pushed me to tell you. So I did. “I’m afraid of God. I’m afraid of Death. I can’t go off of blind faith like I did when I was young. I can’t accept ‘Jesus loves you this I know’ because this I don’t know. And no one Not my parent Not my mentor Not even my Bible can give me enough hope in this regard to bring me to accept not knowing. This amount of stress is me Sits as a damp frog Pestering me to choose Croaking up unformed opinions in the form of tar that I get trapped in. How can I believe in something How can I devote my life to something How can I pray to someone that I am not even convinced has cared for a thousand years? I want to think God knows my name that he is above me as those shiny, divine painting portray. But they’re lies. And people expect me to believe that he is smiling down on me like a new daddy over a crib. He isn’t a father to me. So, I feel lost and confused and scared that I’m wrong and even more terrified that I am right. I’m scared of God. And I’m scared to die. I don’t quite think I even know how to live yet.” “Oh,” You said. “Yeah,” I whispered. “I know.” We both paused. Remember? My arms rested at my sides. Heavy. Yours swung across your chest. Nervous. “So you’re doing great then?” You managed to slide through a smile. “That’s good to hear.”
0
Mar 7, 2013
Mar 7, 2013 at 9:13 PM UTC
that's good to hear
You asked me how I am doing and I said “Good” You asked me to be honest and I said “I’m fine” You told me to expand. I replied, "I'm not good at all. And I want that to be simple enough. I'm not being exaggerative or selfish or birthing drama for drama's sake. It's just that I am here. Here on silly earth, And I feel alone at crossroads in my life. I am under no illusion of my incredibly blessed or undeserving existence. But that's just the problem. LIFE is starting now. And for the first time, I have had to make choices choices on my own choices that (according to mother) will shape who I fundamentally become as a human. So that's a bit distracting. ‘You need to remember not to let people down.’ ‘You should consider how you love someone, not just when to.’ ‘You ought to be more assertive or it'll all come crashing down.’ She reminds me of my uncontrollable imperfection on a daily basis Not necessarily through her words I doubt she wants to inflict this on me. But the way way she stares at me sometimes from across the room. Silently. Like she’s trying to admire a painting that secretly no one quite appreciates or understands but everyone seems to find profound meaning in it so you go along with the show. Which I wouldn't have a problem with if I could wake up refreshed in the morning. And not tired like I am. All the time. I’m tired of being fifteen. Because inside, I don’t feel fifteen. My mind turns on fifty year old gears churning up one hundred year old philosophies. But The age in which I currently must suffer through is misunderstood and incorrectly represented. Teenager is a word parents shudder to hear. A word elders instantly accuse. A word authorities doubt without reasonable basis. The drum pumping my soul is in fact a solo ensemble. But I am naturally clumped in with the lot of marching bands that clash and crash, stomp and slam their drums as they parade the flag of fickle rebellion into the air they barely know. Don’t get me wrong, the stereotypes of my age and time are drawn up from some truth, but one truth shouldn’t result in one outlook. You don’t roll dice with only threes on the faces or only ones. So it is hard to watch as everywhere I go, titles and labels are being stuck into me like toothpicks in a fruit salad. And first of all, just because society cuts me up and breaks me down like a pineapple you can buy with leftover quarters doesn’t mean that I’m up for grabs. And secondly, No one should be branded simply because it is easier to ignore them than to know them. Don’t hear this as a “oh she’s a teenage girl” moment hear this as a “she’s a human and wants to be heard without your filter over her words” moment So, I’m having a hard time with that. Not to mention the rest.” “The rest?” You asked. “You know,” I said, “How I have to decide what school I am going to commit to which is slightly like choosing between your two parents. You can’t pick one happily and freely without knowing what could’ve been if you lived with dad instead. It’s tricky to wake up in the morning. It’s tricky to get out of bed because I know that sooner than later I will either be moving that bed into the basement or into a dorm which won’t be on the campus I really desire because God knows I didn’t save enough pennies for that. My whole future is before me. Almost literally considering the number of pamphlets stapled over the dreams I carved so meticulously out of my ‘mind wood’ with my ‘What do you want to be when you grow up’ knife. So that’s intimidating. And all those “it’ll work itself out” speeches that surround me don’t make the choices suddenly blare across the radio or start blinking from neon signs telling me what to do what to chose what to be. In the end, all those “don’t worry about it” and “you’ll figure it out” do nothing but put a knot in my gut that no amount of research or interviews or Friday night pig outs can untie. Because this stuff, these moments as I build my foundation for my single LIFE with little slippery Lego blocks are not made with cheery hand-outs or inspiring quotes. LIFE is formed by me choosing which Lego brick color choosing which Lego brick shape and of course choosing which people will help me to construct it. It’s tricky It’s messy It’s loud and it makes other things hard to focus on.” “Other things?” You said. “Other things.” I reply. “You know, those books I have to read those graphs I have to draw those tests I have to study for those miles I have to run those words I have to memorize those labs I have to finish those annotations I have to complete those poems I have to parse. Just THOSE. Don’t get me wrong. I don’t mind school Unlike the kids who complain that they are forced to educate themselves. I have no problem learning. In fact, I want to long to. TEACH ME, WORLD! TEACH ME HOW TO UNDERSTAND YOU IN EVERY LANGUAGE I CAN! It’s not the books or the deadlines. It’s the people. Bleh. The people. The cowardly childish people with their smug clothes and horrendous attitudes that you can smell just over the stink of their pomp. Truthfully, I feel for them because they don’t feel for themselves. and because there is little way to prove to these kids that they can be them not doctored them or decorated them the “them” they thrive to be not the “them” they try to be. So I’m surrounded by people icky people whose glares and stares and whispers like cold ghosts leave me too feeling torn between being myself (whatever that even means) and being accepted. I want to be free to try new things, but new things are poison here at school new things are demeaning because they’re demanding. So, I have moments where I say ‘Be you. What does it matter?’ But then when I am alone at the table at the only open table with the last chair the one that squeaks if you rock to the left when I am listening to the music no one knows and reading the book no one chose thinking about the movie even no theater shows that’s when moments of guilt ridden loneliness bring me to say ‘Put yourself away for now. Put in a pin in it. Come back to what you want after you’re done being what society thinks you need.’ Because it is hard to be loved by one sided people it is hard to be loved when the world wants you to say what it wants to hear. Us teenagers think we wear invincibility cloaks So we never have to see those under the invisibility cloaks ‘Don’t question it!’ seems to be the motto of most I meet here. Because who wants to learn, who wants to try if it makes them question their comfort? And of course that all just touches the surface of that other thing. The thing I don’t want to really talk about.” You pushed me to tell you. So I did. “I’m afraid of God. I’m afraid of Death. I can’t go off of blind faith like I did when I was young. I can’t accept ‘Jesus loves you this I know’ because this I don’t know. And no one Not my parent Not my mentor Not even my Bible can give me enough hope in this regard to bring me to accept not knowing. This amount of stress is me Sits as a damp frog Pestering me to choose Croaking up unformed opinions in the form of tar that I get trapped in. How can I believe in something How can I devote my life to something How can I pray to someone that I am not even convinced has cared for a thousand years? I want to think God knows my name that he is above me as those shiny, divine painting portray. But they’re lies. And people expect me to believe that he is smiling down on me like a new daddy over a crib. He isn’t a father to me. So, I feel lost and confused and scared that I’m wrong and even more terrified that I am right. I’m scared of God. And I’m scared to die. I don’t quite think I even know how to live yet.” “Oh,” You said. “Yeah,” I whispered. “I know.” We both paused. Remember? My arms rested at my sides. Heavy. Yours swung across your chest. Nervous. “So you’re doing great then?” You managed to slide through a smile. “That’s good to hear.”
Continue reading...
316
okay. It's a Thursday for me, anyway. Wednesday must've been tough on you. Tuesday too. Because you did get to Thursday. no. I saw you last on Monday. You were in class in the swivel chair near me. Even though I didn't tell you and even though it doesn't matter now, I always thought you were unconventionally beautiful. I guess the saddest people really do smile the brightest. Online, after all the "R.I.P." after all the "I'm so sorry", I listened that song you wrote just a few days before. It was the one about being someone's friend, about wiping away the blood, picking up yourself, and replacing those broken bits. You should've listened to your own advice. I'm not going to make you a martyr. I'm not going to tell you that I miss you. I'd be lying to say I knew you, but I'd be lying even more to say that I don't care. Because I do. Truthfully. I want to make your best friend cookies. You put her through more than most deserve. Warm chocolate can't repair her. Not at this point. Seattle rain can't wash it away. Not any more. I wonder what we will do with the empty chair you left. No one wanted to look at it today. I was worried that the substitute would call your name ignorant of what was going on. I'd probably be the one to stand up and tell him since everyone else was quiet and raw. It is Thursday. for me, anyway. I don't want to ask those things that other students do like how you did it and why and where and when and what we should have done differently and if we could have helped. no. I just want to smile like you did and sing like you did and laugh with friends like you did. Life must've been hard on you, and I'm sorry you only saw one way out of it.
0
Mar 7, 2013
Mar 7, 2013 at 8:56 PM UTC
the empty chair you (she) left
okay. It's a Thursday for me, anyway. Wednesday must've been tough on you. Tuesday too. Because you did get to Thursday. no. I saw you last on Monday. You were in class in the swivel chair near me. Even though I didn't tell you and even though it doesn't matter now, I always thought you were unconventionally beautiful. I guess the saddest people really do smile the brightest. Online, after all the "R.I.P." after all the "I'm so sorry", I listened that song you wrote just a few days before. It was the one about being someone's friend, about wiping away the blood, picking up yourself, and replacing those broken bits. You should've listened to your own advice. I'm not going to make you a martyr. I'm not going to tell you that I miss you. I'd be lying to say I knew you, but I'd be lying even more to say that I don't care. Because I do. Truthfully. I want to make your best friend cookies. You put her through more than most deserve. Warm chocolate can't repair her. Not at this point. Seattle rain can't wash it away. Not any more. I wonder what we will do with the empty chair you left. No one wanted to look at it today. I was worried that the substitute would call your name ignorant of what was going on. I'd probably be the one to stand up and tell him since everyone else was quiet and raw. It is Thursday. for me, anyway. I don't want to ask those things that other students do like how you did it and why and where and when and what we should have done differently and if we could have helped. no. I just want to smile like you did and sing like you did and laugh with friends like you did. Life must've been hard on you, and I'm sorry you only saw one way out of it.
Continue reading...
70
there was never a greater day never a more eloquently beautiful moment that the one when you opened the door to my life and walked out of it shutting it softly as you left with heavy trailing behind your step thank you, love for being that burden I needed
0
Mar 7, 2013
Mar 7, 2013 at 4:08 PM UTC
the greatest day I wept
there was an orange on my desk. i ate it. it tasted like any other orange might taste. but i didn’t eat the rind. no, I left that part on my desk. i wonder what the orange thinks of this. or thought of it, I might add. because its shell, the part of the orange that it once called home and safety and protection and security well, it has been discarded, dismissed from its duties. the insides were picked clean, they were good. but the outside is shriveling under my desk lamp. i wonder what the orange thinks of this, or thought of it, i might add.
0
May 31, 2012
May 31, 2012 at 4:13 PM UTC
There was an orange on my desk...