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brett-jones
The moth with newspaper wings sat under the arrow lungs of the eyeless blood dripped falcon, more whole than the super-glued roman sculpture. Next door a 50’s con held up church with a roulette table in the kitchen, and boarded up the massage parlor downstairs. The eye of the man was a centrifuge of ducks, mallard and hen, spiraling outward into evaporated roach-ground asphalt. Next door, slits in the picket fence displayed perfectly formed **** & broach, empty shoes made of feet below, blending fields. The marble foundation formed from twine lollipops and fuzzy candy tabs, ice-etched to the frequency of splintered seashell angels. Next door through the forest of knives a spaceship bearing gargoyles peaked bodies through collages of faces in technicolor sepia mitosis. The heiress molted into tiled pieces, her own dog and sunhat caught in blizzard cuneiform, kaliedescoping again to fractalled inchworms cemented in motion.
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Jan 15, 2013
Jan 15, 2013 at 9:55 AM UTC
Dither Collective
The seven day prayer candle burned out seven days ago, and the twisted blinds are held together with chopsticks and moving tape after snapping in an unresolved haunting. The nights enter like gemstones and exit like rabbits. Truth sequestered from skin; I get a haircut instead of another tattoo. While shaving my neck with a straight razor, the bald Albanian barber asks me: "Which is scarier: people or mirrors?" Before I could reply he shook his head: “Trick question. They are the same thing.” Walking home, I tore up the if-I-die note I had hidden in my back pocket, and taught the pieces to dance to the silence of buckshot screaming into a black hole. The choreography was as patient as pregnant pauses breathing into paper bags. To the neighbors, smoking cigarettes on their stoops, the shredded paper just looked like litter.
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Jan 15, 2013
Jan 15, 2013 at 9:45 AM UTC
Adonis
“No one is ever satisfied with the success, is ever satisfied with the success, is ever satisfied with the dream.  It’s the hunger before a meal when you realize how good it is to be alive.” With each passing day I feel youth slip from my bones like scoops falling off a summer ice cream cone to blistering pavement.  All of my friend’s dogs are dying of old age just like mine.  Childhood trees we used to climb have either grown too tall to reach or were struck by lightning.  Decisions, no matter how trivial, become monumental in the scope of time.  There is no end in sight…only the faintest memory of humble beginnings, leading us blindly into the vacuum of tomorrow, ******* the dreams from our head to feed the plague of survival. That’s why you bruise with a breath.  Your heart beats too hard for your house of card frame.  Your body—desert willow—thrives on nothing, pumping cells full of carrots, vitamins and codeine. Last night, While you were sleeping, I sank to the bottom of the ocean with a seven mile chain attached to a thousand pound anchor and a Swiss army knife.  Slipping through seasons I fell colder and deeper and darker, waving and giggling as I sank for miles, watching the surface light blur and fade completely until I was in night, a gentle pulse of luminescence massaging me with it’s glow, the old-ironsides squid laughing, the rave fish pulsing with dinner plate pupils, the leather armor jellyfish are calm as Sunday's first **** and the flat rainbow fish spin their data and vanish into black. All I think I know at 22: Why they call this the information age; What Buddy meant when he said, “There is a distance the size of bravery”; This is the best part.
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Jan 8, 2012
Jan 8, 2012 at 4:11 PM UTC
How Do You Categorize Your Thoughts?
“No one is ever satisfied with the success, is ever satisfied with the success, is ever satisfied with the dream.  It’s the hunger before a meal when you realize how good it is to be alive.” With each passing day I feel youth slip from my bones like scoops falling off a summer ice cream cone to blistering pavement.  All of my friend’s dogs are dying of old age just like mine.  Childhood trees we used to climb have either grown too tall to reach or were struck by lightning.  Decisions, no matter how trivial, become monumental in the scope of time.  There is no end in sight…only the faintest memory of humble beginnings, leading us blindly into the vacuum of tomorrow, ******* the dreams from our head to feed the plague of survival. That’s why you bruise with a breath.  Your heart beats too hard for your house of card frame.  Your body—desert willow—thrives on nothing, pumping cells full of carrots, vitamins and codeine. Last night, While you were sleeping, I sank to the bottom of the ocean with a seven mile chain attached to a thousand pound anchor and a Swiss army knife.  Slipping through seasons I fell colder and deeper and darker, waving and giggling as I sank for miles, watching the surface light blur and fade completely until I was in night, a gentle pulse of luminescence massaging me with it’s glow, the old-ironsides squid laughing, the rave fish pulsing with dinner plate pupils, the leather armor jellyfish are calm as Sunday's first **** and the flat rainbow fish spin their data and vanish into black. All I think I know at 22: Why they call this the information age; What Buddy meant when he said, “There is a distance the size of bravery”; This is the best part.
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20
Next time I act like a heartbroken Holmes, do me a favor and let me drink it away. Words hurt what whiskey soothes. I catch your name drifting away on a nimbus, past the trees of someone else’s hometown. Your eyes are bean sprouts and your scent is divorce. Your fingers are still placid, not yet ****** from the scratch of anxiety. Eyebrows bow to nose bone in speculative uncertainty, confusing rainy prom nights with dreams of Hercules. One more sip of wine will detonate firecracker cheeks. I hold your hand in secret on desolate city streets, remembering the practice of lost lovers and drunk ******* in dead friend’s beds and falling down staircases in mid-afternoon moonshine. Our pasts intertwine, just as West-coast tourist traps fill family photo albums.
0
Oct 29, 2011
Oct 29, 2011 at 7:44 PM UTC
Regarding The Closeted Skeletons
To tell the story of the nice-guy is to tell a tale of unlost innocence.   There is no complexity that circumstance can’t remedy.  There is no effort to niceness; only a ****** world that blossoms on genetically mutated ideology, growing larger than generations past. Tomorrow, in Houston, a butcher will wake up to slaughter a cow he may have named.   There will no be no tears when he grills steak for the wife he wooed and the children he prescribed himself.   Three daughters, from fifteen to twenty-two.   Tiramisu for dessert.   Ten guns in the cabinet beneath the stairs and innocence buried behind the woodshed. Pretend now, that you are forgiven.   Mistakes fade like snow angels, regrets float like chemtrails. You love you as much as the world always did.   You have not seen friends struck down by powders or lunacy, you have only lived in the glow of their light.  Hearts remain full.   The word swagger hasn’t been hijacked by hip hop and bluejeans still mask imperfections.  Sunsets are memorable, and so are first dates and last kisses.   Sun won't blister fragile shoulders.   Fields blossom just in time to suit your irregular taste buds, satisfying sweet corn cravings on Christmas. Forget your father’s words or a stranger's hand.   Forget improbability, impossibility, impotence, importance, impatience and improper goodbyes.   Forget the tears cried alone into ***** filled sheets at midnight.   Forget the effect but remember the cause, camouflaged like a landmine of good ideas.   Forget the fights and slow-turn walk-aways that turned words flaccid.   Forget friends ******* ex-girl friends and amphetamines crashing into hallucinations.   Nice-guys vanish like good ideas, lost in the shuffle, looking for pen and paper, just like house cats die on the forth of July, and all that’s left are ashes on a mantel alongside fraudulent grins.
0
Oct 29, 2011
Oct 29, 2011 at 7:42 PM UTC
Spontaneous Human Combustion
To tell the story of the nice-guy is to tell a tale of unlost innocence.   There is no complexity that circumstance can’t remedy.  There is no effort to niceness; only a ****** world that blossoms on genetically mutated ideology, growing larger than generations past. Tomorrow, in Houston, a butcher will wake up to slaughter a cow he may have named.   There will no be no tears when he grills steak for the wife he wooed and the children he prescribed himself.   Three daughters, from fifteen to twenty-two.   Tiramisu for dessert.   Ten guns in the cabinet beneath the stairs and innocence buried behind the woodshed. Pretend now, that you are forgiven.   Mistakes fade like snow angels, regrets float like chemtrails. You love you as much as the world always did.   You have not seen friends struck down by powders or lunacy, you have only lived in the glow of their light.  Hearts remain full.   The word swagger hasn’t been hijacked by hip hop and bluejeans still mask imperfections.  Sunsets are memorable, and so are first dates and last kisses.   Sun won't blister fragile shoulders.   Fields blossom just in time to suit your irregular taste buds, satisfying sweet corn cravings on Christmas. Forget your father’s words or a stranger's hand.   Forget improbability, impossibility, impotence, importance, impatience and improper goodbyes.   Forget the tears cried alone into ***** filled sheets at midnight.   Forget the effect but remember the cause, camouflaged like a landmine of good ideas.   Forget the fights and slow-turn walk-aways that turned words flaccid.   Forget friends ******* ex-girl friends and amphetamines crashing into hallucinations.   Nice-guys vanish like good ideas, lost in the shuffle, looking for pen and paper, just like house cats die on the forth of July, and all that’s left are ashes on a mantel alongside fraudulent grins.
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48
Twenty-somethings, homeless, but with perfect fashion, in muted greys and translucent lilacs sit outside Union Square. They have the coolest tattoos and the coolest carboard signs, all more transcendental and valuable than the sidewalk they sleep on. Some are tweaking, some are sleep, some lean and have spit dribbling from their burned lips as they drift into a coma, like war heroes. I want to give them a bowl of my homemade vegan chili. They can have cheese and sour cream, depending how righteous they are. I want to speak sweetly with their mothers while they prune geraniums along the cracked and faded sidewalk. I wont smoke in their parent's garage like an outcast uncle, or have more than one beer with dinner. The next day I’ll go back to the storefront to explain everything I've learned, over instant coffee and Entenmanns. This time it's their turn to share wisdom as 13th Street muscles from slumber, achy under the weight of lost bodegas and barbershops. I’ve been told every homeless person needs a sign, no matter what variation or breed. Some write a new message every day, some stick to one, but only a few don’t write anything at all. “Not even gonna lie: need money for bud.” The pulse behind the sign renders words irrelevant. The 500 year old Chinese woman captures the room like a drunk teenager. The oily scarecrow with a leather hat dances, rattling his tin can. Only occasionally will an assertive hungry hobo be satisfied with a granola bar in place of anything less than Jackson. “This is what it sounds like, when the doves cry.” Southern church bells ringing through dive bars filled with sinners.
0
Oct 20, 2011
Oct 20, 2011 at 12:28 AM UTC
There's Always Someone Cooler Than You
Twenty-somethings, homeless, but with perfect fashion, in muted greys and translucent lilacs sit outside Union Square. They have the coolest tattoos and the coolest carboard signs, all more transcendental and valuable than the sidewalk they sleep on. Some are tweaking, some are sleep, some lean and have spit dribbling from their burned lips as they drift into a coma, like war heroes. I want to give them a bowl of my homemade vegan chili. They can have cheese and sour cream, depending how righteous they are. I want to speak sweetly with their mothers while they prune geraniums along the cracked and faded sidewalk. I wont smoke in their parent's garage like an outcast uncle, or have more than one beer with dinner. The next day I’ll go back to the storefront to explain everything I've learned, over instant coffee and Entenmanns. This time it's their turn to share wisdom as 13th Street muscles from slumber, achy under the weight of lost bodegas and barbershops. I’ve been told every homeless person needs a sign, no matter what variation or breed. Some write a new message every day, some stick to one, but only a few don’t write anything at all. “Not even gonna lie: need money for bud.” The pulse behind the sign renders words irrelevant. The 500 year old Chinese woman captures the room like a drunk teenager. The oily scarecrow with a leather hat dances, rattling his tin can. Only occasionally will an assertive hungry hobo be satisfied with a granola bar in place of anything less than Jackson. “This is what it sounds like, when the doves cry.” Southern church bells ringing through dive bars filled with sinners.
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45
Bumpy reptilian skin splits to reveal a placid galaxy of green cream that moves through my throat like a greased pig on a waterslide and spreads like wildfire in my belly. I am fueled by the divinity of now, before the indifferent air of tomorrow ruins such simple perfection and the only option is to start over, the pit, only half above water.
0
Sep 27, 2011
Sep 27, 2011 at 11:29 PM UTC
Avacado Starshine
I made chicken soup in August. The timing is terrible, but you should still try a bowl. When you go home, tell your parents what I said: You look better in a prom dress then you ever could in a wedding gown. Let's bury this corpse underneath a church hearse and all. If you steal a carnation to hang like an icicle in your bedroom, I'll never tell a soul. Our war kept us safe from the dungeons of autonomous thought. Now every time I step outside, my summer skin feels like winter.
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Aug 29, 2011
Aug 29, 2011 at 8:48 PM UTC
The Day After A Hurricane
The old metaphor rings too true as I think of friends lost to the lives they lived. Brave words ****** out of young lungs and spoken before they ever had the chance. Beautiful young faces glow in pictures, like rookie-year baseball cards, capturing untold potential. Not a bad thing, some will say -- “to die before growing old” “to stay beautiful forever” “to live such a full life in so few years” -- but still, best friends cry, eyeballs turn to cracked glass, and cotton-candy hearts callus. Because they can never leave us the right way. So I  maintain the lemonade nights and starshine days in my brain. Thanks to Angels, I treat each magical step like bold beams of light shot out of the dreams we strive to make right. between hugs and struggles that tempt our inevitable fate, let me tell you, “I love you”, before it’s  too late.
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Feb 21, 2011
Feb 21, 2011 at 3:44 PM UTC
We're Dropping Like Flies.
I hate my hands. I'd love to write about it, but every time I try, they always **** it up.
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Oct 14, 2010
Oct 14, 2010 at 4:55 PM UTC
Ain't That A *****