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bri
bri
American
lounging in a ripped and stretched wifebeater, a breast half peeking and my legs, unshaved propped against the wall i watch as he creeps closer, holding me with his gaze, beads of sweat forming on his brow. i smile at him to show him i'm not nervous, turning to arch my back and allow my hair to cover my eyes i know he is unbuttoning his pants staring at my underwear, lace-rimmed and clinging to the parts he will touch soon i let him **** me because i had nothing better to do
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Nov 13, 2014
Nov 13, 2014 at 4:28 PM UTC
I let him **** me
That day, a day like any other, the tuxedo cat pads down the stairs while a refrigerator hums in the kitchen, and outside, leaves sway and drift to the ground into the melting of dead, brightly lifeless colors. But watch as her glass, dropping from her hand, bounces to the floor, as the tea kettle screams and her hands blanket her mouth, and notice as she’s unable to cry out. Now watch—watch as the TV man lifts his paper with shaking hands, voice trembling as he introduces live footage of crumbling and desolating powder flying through the air like a pound of grey flour being thrown at the floor, exploding in every possible direction. Watch as people scream, flee to anywhere, yet unable—unable to flee to what we had before this, one we were all begging for as we watched her towers desolate to the ground of New York City. And outside, there were too many legs to find my father. I saw the tears, a nervous and unsettling aura hanging over their heads, how could anyone, any child, take in this fear and understand it? Once, when I was little, I heard a quote—I don’t remember where from anymore. But it followed me, rang through my ears, drumming with a hard, undeviating hammer, at that moment. “We’re all as separate as fingers, yet we are always from the same hand.” Why were we all separated? Why— why was this happening? I’ll never forget when I looked and noticed the crossing guard give up on direction, shoulders wilting as he turned his back and walked away. Then there was Dad, and amongst the panic, the one—the only one I knew would tell me, who would soothe me, who would make sense of all the corruption, he grabbed my wrist, pulled me into his arms and cradled me as if I was indeed the infant I felt like in those short minutes. He walked home, not saying a word, holding me in his arms. I knew not to say anything. I knew at that moment, that even if I asked, he would not answer. I saw him helpless, the armor and strength ripped from him for the first time. I decided to try anyway and as I looked up and opened my mouth, his tears, silent and unnoticed by me, splattered onto my face, and I knew I would have no answer speak louder than of that.
0
Nov 13, 2014
Nov 13, 2014 at 4:22 PM UTC
Poem #7
That day, a day like any other, the tuxedo cat pads down the stairs while a refrigerator hums in the kitchen, and outside, leaves sway and drift to the ground into the melting of dead, brightly lifeless colors. But watch as her glass, dropping from her hand, bounces to the floor, as the tea kettle screams and her hands blanket her mouth, and notice as she’s unable to cry out. Now watch—watch as the TV man lifts his paper with shaking hands, voice trembling as he introduces live footage of crumbling and desolating powder flying through the air like a pound of grey flour being thrown at the floor, exploding in every possible direction. Watch as people scream, flee to anywhere, yet unable—unable to flee to what we had before this, one we were all begging for as we watched her towers desolate to the ground of New York City. And outside, there were too many legs to find my father. I saw the tears, a nervous and unsettling aura hanging over their heads, how could anyone, any child, take in this fear and understand it? Once, when I was little, I heard a quote—I don’t remember where from anymore. But it followed me, rang through my ears, drumming with a hard, undeviating hammer, at that moment. “We’re all as separate as fingers, yet we are always from the same hand.” Why were we all separated? Why— why was this happening? I’ll never forget when I looked and noticed the crossing guard give up on direction, shoulders wilting as he turned his back and walked away. Then there was Dad, and amongst the panic, the one—the only one I knew would tell me, who would soothe me, who would make sense of all the corruption, he grabbed my wrist, pulled me into his arms and cradled me as if I was indeed the infant I felt like in those short minutes. He walked home, not saying a word, holding me in his arms. I knew not to say anything. I knew at that moment, that even if I asked, he would not answer. I saw him helpless, the armor and strength ripped from him for the first time. I decided to try anyway and as I looked up and opened my mouth, his tears, silent and unnoticed by me, splattered onto my face, and I knew I would have no answer speak louder than of that.
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Agnes: Wine, for the Greeks, brought more than burgundy to the screen, instead illuminant pinks and purples and yellows swirl and wirl and twirl in orchestrated dances of Spring. Cherubim soar, teasingly mocking these gods, drunk with passion and their grape wine while pegasi rest, swoop and land like swans to a water’s surface. Joy and ***** happiness, lovely and sound, they prance. In a swirl, in a wirl and in a twirl, you bring me back to my favorite scene, when Fantasia was my insight on art when my mother would sit and watch with me, instead of busying herself with others. I had not thought of that in years, I had not remembered the jolt to my system, to the system of a little girl, who, often alone had to create her own art, often had to imagine her own melodies. Agnes, you’ve brought the next jolt, I’m once again flying with the black Pegasus, swooping back to the dark living room, followed by a stampede of centaurs cherubim lulling me to sleep, swirling and wirling and twirling my own colors, carrying me back to her music.
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Nov 13, 2014
Nov 13, 2014 at 4:20 PM UTC
Agnes Pelton, “First Spring Garland”
Chipping nails, shards of hardened skin and turquois on silver,  her hand attached to a paperback permeating of rotting corpses and wilted flowers among washed up license plates scuffed by sea glass, once a bottle of a failed enlightened and darkened drunk,   I am sure of it. You drool, salvia skulking your chin— loose fingers drop the rain-soaked umbrella and I’m drenched in water, I sail down the street, on an arc brimmed with mammals and arachnids; six of the spiders, two of the dog. I spit out and profess the skin once clung to my lips, I see the layers, out here, two dogs prance around the field, tripping over each other as six spiders creep and crawl under us, slithering one lands on my sweater in the classroom,          I squish it dead, with the heel of my hand. Usually, I’d scream. Instead, I took the power to make something alive—something dead. Fog-Horn Leg-Horn, “and then-and then, I say-I say” kills you, wadding you beneath the cooped-up coop, Swiper Swipes No More.
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Nov 13, 2014
Nov 13, 2014 at 4:15 PM UTC
Surreal
I sneer at the obscenities attached to my hips, reflecting back at me from my mocking mirror. Laugh! Laugh at me! It’s okay. My dark humor stalks me. He grasps my waist— I **** in, recoil and Shrink from the vicinity of his gentle touch. He tries to reassure me. How could he see? How could he understand? To him—to him, it’s only a lie, something I only imagine. “It’s all in your head”— My head? It’s the lightest Part! My waist staggers down to the lumps, The clumped hips, travels quickly without fail Changing form—sometimes, sometimes it isn’t there— But I feel it, I feel it, I do. I feel myself weighed Down, and when I weigh In, my eyes do not cover up its answer.
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Nov 13, 2014
Nov 13, 2014 at 4:14 PM UTC
Poem #6
The air is clean, open. Nothing is so profoundly loud. Snow is rooted and solid, and each snowflake placed on purpose. The quiet whispers through the wind and there isn’t a sound that speaks as clearly as the vast emptiness of this winter. Honest are these snowflakes, placed on purpose. It is as if something this solid is expected to stay, as though silence will never change. As though the snowmen will always laugh. I hope that what is true at this moment, will still be when the sun decides to rise. Snow will melt, however. The silence will liquefy, the solidarity of these purposefully placed moments— these will fade. New hopes will appear, solidify themselves, only to be spoken, the cold silence shattered.
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Nov 13, 2014
Nov 13, 2014 at 4:13 PM UTC
Silence of the Cold
She woke us up whistling, a tune she felt fit the morning. She was practical, determined in her walk unlike my sister and I, who let the buckets clamber against our calves. The garden was dark, dew was still resting, quietly the air was soft, warm, like blankets we had just left. We stood over the bean patch, a vibrant green in the blistering sun, a deep green in this early morning. She told us to begin picking. I begin; lifting the plant to the side one way, I pluck the strings like I was taught years ago and toss them into my bucket. I do the same, clumsy movement to the other side. She is humming the same tune she whistled, farther ahead than I. I watch her from the side, her fingers move with swift, practiced movements fingers strict, demanding and the beans, refusing to test her not like they so often did with me I study her hands, the bones prominent where her age has raised the veins, the tendons; though hers are stronger, stronger than mine will ever be. I didn’t notice as she turned, noticed me watching, still bent over the same patch and looked at me, eyes easy, voice strong— “Girl, get movin’, You won’t want to be pickin’ when the sun rises” And I, refusing to test her, fall into her words like the beans to the pail and pick some more.
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Nov 13, 2014
Nov 13, 2014 at 4:06 PM UTC
Beans
When I fly away, shimmering waves of seed, golden under the dimming light of this August evening and the soft breeze ripples the sea of corn, spread wide over the body of land, the rocking chair sighs unchanging motion, back and forth, back and forth, as the abyssal field stretches. I am cast into the waves; I float on to this serene place and from the porch, I breathe in the emerging dew, the quiet dampness of summer the dirt on the road. The fire flies, the cicadas come out looking for each other, flashing meager lights, pulsing chirps through the twilight. The sunset fills the sky, the house, clings to my hair like dust caught in a sunlit room, suspended in the air in a dance of gravity. I am stunned with fondness, it soothes me, pours from my skin like beads of sweat dripping down my collar bone. Free from the sting within myself, I sit, I rock.
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Nov 13, 2014
Nov 13, 2014 at 4:03 PM UTC
When I Fly
Sway, sway pinch the corner of your dress with your middle finger and thumb as you twirl, twirl, round and round, Oh how your hair flies, your pearls drape down your neck, like a chandelier pronouncing you, introducing us to your crystallized grace. He cannot help himself, his urge to squeeze and hold you dear, Dear you're his queen, even at sixteen, with your June baby-on-the-way belly, he watches as you swayed, and twirl, twirl, you remove his fear, wash it away from his face with your gentle fingers, you introduce him to your grace, later, You cut your hair short, put away your dresses, packed the pearls to the side-- until you dressed me, giggled as I tripped in your satin gowns, shuffled clumsily in your high heels, you tied ribbons to my hair, needing no brush, twirling my hair through your fingers, you tell me to sway, to twirl, you place the pearls over my head, I was never afraid. Now your hair is gone, I can no longer wear your dresses, or shine in your pearls, but you are still a chandelier, existing now more than ever. Your grace never bowed to age, your eyes are still glinting, shining and he is scared, I am scared, we are all scared, Grandmother, but you stand straight, removing clothes pins from the line outside. We watch you waltz with white linen, and I see you before you disappear behind the sheets, I see your silhouette twirling, your dress and your hair-- I see you, unafraid, still swaying.
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Nov 13, 2014
Nov 13, 2014 at 3:57 PM UTC
Poem #8
i'm just weird i think too much, swivel thoughts around my mind until i suffocate my brain, i think too much i think too much i think too much. i wanna stop, for just a second and apologize, then i realize, i'm thinking too much i'm thinking too much, just shut up.
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Jan 29, 2013
Jan 29, 2013 at 12:10 AM UTC
i'm just