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ayya
grad student. human bean.
the door opens and shuts faster than i can wash my hands hopes pinned to a cork board, viciously stick around for 3 to 5 days and enter my body; enter my lungs am i dying or is the world my world just collapsing around me? “stay away from me” posted to my forehead but my stomach craves attention, certainty be gentle with me. nature is healing but humans are dying from this as well as other diseases, as well as other afflictions, as well as other tragedies building on each other instead of staying 6 feet away how will i tell my children, robbed of normalcy that things are even worse that now it’s airborne, that now being stuck at home means being stuck in a cold war zone if they don’t wear masks they might get hit if i don’t wear a mask i might get sick in front of them droplets hang in the air a little too long i wait to tell them a little too long by then we’ve already got the dry cough fever burning up our house and it’s walls and we must stay stay home stay in an abandoned wreckage until it’s safe again to go outside
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Apr 24, 2020
Apr 24, 2020 at 2:28 PM UTC
divorce in the time of coronavirus
we lay in bed and tell each other which forests we want to carve our names into, which branches we hope to knock down, or grow into, which places we want to make our own money, our own homes, and our own. I tell you I don’t know - you tell me you don’t know - we go on to tell each other all of the things we think might be the things we know. I trust you. and I have to trust that you trust me to do the things we lay out on maps. to follow and veer, and when the engine stalls, to let go. I told him, “We’ll have a corgi and a husky” and you told me, “Plan A is to become an astronaut” and I tell them over and over thank you for letting me stay the night.
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May 8, 2017
May 8, 2017 at 12:22 AM UTC
corgi & a husky
i want someone to read my dirtiest thoughts and not be scared or pity me i want empathy while i spit blood and *** and sweat and pull at ingrown hairs; while i tell you i’m not sure why i’m alive while i tell you i’m not sure anyone loves me while i tell you i’ve had dreams about you exploding, your insides spread across the living room walls in some kind of strange irony, i want you to be as sad as I am but lovely enough to pull us both out i want to be saved little by little person by person word by word secret by secret until i know longer feel like you would run if i told you i wanted you to run, or if i wanted you to stay; until i no longer have anything horrible enough to scare you away.
0
Mar 20, 2017
Mar 20, 2017 at 10:58 PM UTC
tmi
I wonder what it's like to have arms that don't feel like weights dragging in the sand, leaving creases in everything you've touched, or stumbled past, trying to reach some place where the ground is solid, not liquid beneath the soles of our feet, constantly changing and challenging us to meet the day with uncertainty and certain immediacy of choices, all of which will inevitably cause you to leave or to stay. I wonder what it's like to forget where I've been and focus on where I am now; I wonder if I'd be happier or even more lost. I walk around like an open wound without the vulnerability; walls around the sore but nothing to help it heal. My chest feels heavy. My back feels heavy. The weight of you is heavy, almost as heavy as the weight of my own arms.
0
Mar 20, 2017
Mar 20, 2017 at 3:23 AM UTC
Weights
I sit and hold my grandmother in the shape of a small pillow on my bed - they turned the dress she used to wear into covers for all of my family's grief and all of human need for things to stay close. Her dress matches my bedsheets, so it seems almost too fitting for her to be here. I know grandmothers are grandmothers, but they've always been people before that, and maybe pillows afterwards. I have a lot to do before I die, and a lot more people will probably know me and at least a few more people will probably love me, and I don't wear a lot of dresses but, I hope I will compliment the color scheme of your bedspread someday. I hope I will fit as easily into your life as a she fit into mine.
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Feb 12, 2017
Feb 12, 2017 at 4:33 AM UTC
mommom
there is only so much time for night bugs and spring peepers bullfrogs and late creepers hidden in the beams that shape the back porch of my heart. there is more time left for whatever's left to start.
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Aug 14, 2016
Aug 14, 2016 at 5:56 PM UTC
back porch
sometimes when I hear a joke or read it somewhere in the vast expanse of words and sayings and stories, I see you hiding in the punchline. You nod your head, you force a louder chuckle than you need to - I know how hard it is for you to laugh with me, but I also know that this punchline was the glue that kept us stuck. Now, even with you on the other side of everything, I can hear your laugh in a bad joke we would've loved.
0
Aug 14, 2016
Aug 14, 2016 at 5:54 PM UTC
bad joke
All wrapped up in flannel A bouquet, of sorts - Of love, maybe Pride, maybe Effort, always. It has to be hard to be earned. Jump for the flowers, Make them come to you. this body right now Feels like summer Like home Soft, capable, and mine. This body right now, My body, Finally feels as so. credit my clothes, Grant them power, Make them make me but in all honesty, this body is more Than flannel-shirt deep. A blossom, of sorts underneath of love, maybe of pride, maybe Of me. Writing this feels a bit like a prayer sometimes, Most times, This self-love gets tangled in it's fair share of Misfirings Miscommunications And doubts. Without it, I have learned To feign Self-hood. But with it, Now, I can claim This body. I claim it for love. And mostly, For pride; whatever that is For you Whatever you are To me.
0
Aug 14, 2016
Aug 14, 2016 at 5:51 PM UTC
Flannel-shirt
everyone feels alone sometimes. we all have parties we couldn't go to, weren't invited to, left early because we felt like we didn't belong. Loneliness is not a disease. It is human experience, like love and hunger and getting your toe stubbed on a door. What they didn't tell me was that loneliness should not be a lifestyle. I don't mean isolation - I knew not to cut myself off, I knew we could never survive all alone but I didn't know that we could never survive all tangled up together either. Loneliness becomes a lifestyle when codependency becomes your idea of closeness, of love, of identity - I don't know how long I've thought other people needed to be helped before me other people needed to be loved before me other people needed to be felt before me I don't know how long I haven't known Myself to be anything other than others I've loved. It is so easy to hate yourself when you aren't convinced you exist. When you're not sure you really aren't just his legs or her torso, their throats combined into one, Who's to say these hands are really mine? When I think about my fingers, individual, small, difficult, I am scared. I forget every day that I am here As soon as I fall into someone else's eyes and shape and words and - and I do not know how to remember. My loneliness is not a disease, tearing me down and eating me from the inside out; it's the cure that makes me shiver on a floor of my own sick tendencies to push and pull and scrape, never sit, always wanting more skin than anyone has to give.
0
Aug 14, 2016
Aug 14, 2016 at 5:50 PM UTC
(co)dependent
everyone feels alone sometimes. we all have parties we couldn't go to, weren't invited to, left early because we felt like we didn't belong. Loneliness is not a disease. It is human experience, like love and hunger and getting your toe stubbed on a door. What they didn't tell me was that loneliness should not be a lifestyle. I don't mean isolation - I knew not to cut myself off, I knew we could never survive all alone but I didn't know that we could never survive all tangled up together either. Loneliness becomes a lifestyle when codependency becomes your idea of closeness, of love, of identity - I don't know how long I've thought other people needed to be helped before me other people needed to be loved before me other people needed to be felt before me I don't know how long I haven't known Myself to be anything other than others I've loved. It is so easy to hate yourself when you aren't convinced you exist. When you're not sure you really aren't just his legs or her torso, their throats combined into one, Who's to say these hands are really mine? When I think about my fingers, individual, small, difficult, I am scared. I forget every day that I am here As soon as I fall into someone else's eyes and shape and words and - and I do not know how to remember. My loneliness is not a disease, tearing me down and eating me from the inside out; it's the cure that makes me shiver on a floor of my own sick tendencies to push and pull and scrape, never sit, always wanting more skin than anyone has to give.
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I am reaching. So many of my poems begin with reaching. I feel like I am always reaching, without ever breaching any of the walls I crawl to. I just can't get past you. You trespass and then scatter, even when I want you to matter. There's no way to start a poem without reaching. My poems are all about grasping at thin air with words that are my arms, my hands trying to grab anything to keep me grounded. I've found its only a matter of time before my crime is punished - I have empty hands, swollen arms, and a useless throat. I am reaching. Squeaking, because maybe noise will draw you in. Call you into your place in me. Emptiness doesn't sit well with me. It boils into anger my friends who won't fill me, my mother who instilled in me a fear of getting close; too, my brother that won't know me, my father who won't show me the only thing I need. I am angry at them for existing without me, Because without them, I do not remember if my hands are really reaching or just floating; empty space in a world with too many walls and not enough.
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Aug 14, 2016
Aug 14, 2016 at 5:48 PM UTC
reaching