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claire-carson
claire-carson
everything is weird
A yellow exhaustion eats the skinny stomach comfort of wondering how the night will dissolve and how paranoid the longing mind will be while falling asleep The click click dancing in the head- a colorful dripping noise and dangerous creaking around me, keeping me awake and wondering if the doors are locked What eggshell floorboards will I walk along tomorrow? What will I break or preserve? What will the daytime smell like? When it’s dark (and all I can know in the moment) everything that existed under sunlight seems so far away I can’t recall how it affects the senses- like leaving Colorado, trying to will the taste of snow air back to the tongue but it’s as gone as summer, as Stacy to Georgia And lying in bed, still as the elderly in church, wondering which one of our mouths eat the most lies and which ones spit the most out I dedicate one sharp inhale to winter And shut my eyes (the ones I watch you with) to the cold
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Apr 25, 2014
Apr 25, 2014 at 3:31 PM UTC
Untitled
Writing to grow flowers out of my dead thoughts usually late late dark late at night the gem hours: red with the tunnel vision of 2am to fear in avoiding paranoia winter dreaming and waking up to the world streaming light into the window, but it’s colder then it looks out there- deceptive weather keeping things interesting Weather and this life are strange like how it would snow in the more southern neighborhoods by Kristin’s house on Jackson St. (near where the old german man sold chocolate) and stay dry by my house Stay dry by Anthony’s pizza where I went to dinner when my grades were good and after the Christmas pageant when I walked off the wrong side of the stage- it’s always been a horror- to give my body and attention to a room full of people with high expectations I guess that’s why it’s necessary to continue to try to prove fathers wrong who stick themselves into bad situations and recording studios and stay away forever Now: dead grass the only nature around and Strattera to numb the high decibel level of the mess- a loud scream, a reminder of tomorrow tomorrow tomorrow red tomorrow of having to follow through I write to find a way out of the quick sand- a reason to get out of bed.
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Apr 25, 2014
Apr 25, 2014 at 3:27 PM UTC
Untitled
this is not a poem about schmaltzy loneliness but about what it means to have a mother- to have come from some place as strange and remarkable as another human being and to separate from that person, from their body and become alone- confined to a single mind and skin skeleton machine how it's strange to grow up and in some home- your first house where all your little bones turn into bigger bones and to move away from that place and to forever attempt to recall the details of it -the patterns on the rugs, the scratches on the floorboards, the way it all smelled (i'm right now trying to remember 2454 South Washington st- with the red brick chimney- down the street from Saint Joseph’s Hospital- where the nativity scene glowed green and red every winter as a reminder that God was a lifetime of confusion away) how it's strange to grow- how the mind and skin stretch and suddenly we're older, and still holding on to the feeling that somewhere happiness hides in this lifetime in some mountain town or occupation or hobby or other person like a favorite scarf from childhood that’s been buried in the closet she will one day appear and feel familiar and we will grow old together on a porch drinking tea and wearing sweaters happiness and me it's about the forever loneliness of being a person universal and filled with homesickness for what exists past life on earth ... inevitable, i guess
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Apr 24, 2014
Apr 24, 2014 at 6:19 PM UTC
Untitled
this achy cold nighttime brings about a sweet and terrifying loneliness that rises with the moon and the creaks in the walls remind me- no one else is home the problem with being an introvert who suffers from anxiety is that you're never sure what's worse- being uncomfortably surrounded or paranoid and alone
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Apr 24, 2014
Apr 24, 2014 at 5:53 PM UTC
Untitled
and to the holy faces that surround me always (the artists) To these rooms- always in double-standard disarray and bearing witness to my beginning of life crisis with borders of brilliant rectangular windows, never left open, captured closed by the boy with the stolen necklaces (it’s a shame, but I’ve never known how to ask for light on my face or for help) To the memory of Ginsberg until 4 in the morning, poetry and Moloch eating our five warm and open minds To the nail hole badges our walls wear in honor of creation, the abandonment and the constant new order of art and art and clean art and bad art and genius; my words are their brain children To the conversely barren walls (they make me nauseous), the daily scrubbings of the kitchen counters, fears manifested in ***** bathrooms and the oppressive blue and ‘Turbulent Indigo’ of the speakers in my bedroom where I lay my head in contemplation of the boy I share a bed with, watching him- reading the freckles on his back into novels, thick with tear stains, I put my eyes right up to the pages because who doesn’t love the smell of an old book? (and so everything is grey and illegible now) To the all-over ceramics: ashtrays pregnant with vice and the relief of night, that Jordan molded with her own two hands and the endless owls in all our cupboards that Caleb made before he crawled back, tail between his legs, to the porches and whiskey of South Georgia This is for all I have come to know in the mad house: that our love is as inconsistent as the arrangements of blankets in the living room, that we should all be leery of the color blue and computers and computers and, for that matter, technology as a whole- especially when we are together I have come to know what it is to live in a commune of pitiful couches leaking ***** of sad cotton,   of concoctions of vegetables (never pure enough) and dishes in the kitchen sink and white carpets thick with cat hair, which is why we sing those words, absentmindedly, when we fold clothes or put on our pajamas. (The air in this house is stuffy with all that we don’t know how phrase just right) And yet, the sun licks the morning off of Dallas and all that carved a hole in my middle yesterday becomes irrelevant and untrue as I toast the day in honor of these people and this shelter- the glory of a canvass, a picture frame, a blanket from Colorado,  and screws in dry wall So, I write because of the homemade pillows, because of marijuana, because all life is an attachment and I am glad to be attached to all of you I write out of gratefulness, out of understanding I write because I’m with you (with all of you) in Rockland.
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Apr 23, 2014
Apr 23, 2014 at 3:51 PM UTC
An Ode to 160
and to the holy faces that surround me always (the artists) To these rooms- always in double-standard disarray and bearing witness to my beginning of life crisis with borders of brilliant rectangular windows, never left open, captured closed by the boy with the stolen necklaces (it’s a shame, but I’ve never known how to ask for light on my face or for help) To the memory of Ginsberg until 4 in the morning, poetry and Moloch eating our five warm and open minds To the nail hole badges our walls wear in honor of creation, the abandonment and the constant new order of art and art and clean art and bad art and genius; my words are their brain children To the conversely barren walls (they make me nauseous), the daily scrubbings of the kitchen counters, fears manifested in ***** bathrooms and the oppressive blue and ‘Turbulent Indigo’ of the speakers in my bedroom where I lay my head in contemplation of the boy I share a bed with, watching him- reading the freckles on his back into novels, thick with tear stains, I put my eyes right up to the pages because who doesn’t love the smell of an old book? (and so everything is grey and illegible now) To the all-over ceramics: ashtrays pregnant with vice and the relief of night, that Jordan molded with her own two hands and the endless owls in all our cupboards that Caleb made before he crawled back, tail between his legs, to the porches and whiskey of South Georgia This is for all I have come to know in the mad house: that our love is as inconsistent as the arrangements of blankets in the living room, that we should all be leery of the color blue and computers and computers and, for that matter, technology as a whole- especially when we are together I have come to know what it is to live in a commune of pitiful couches leaking ***** of sad cotton,   of concoctions of vegetables (never pure enough) and dishes in the kitchen sink and white carpets thick with cat hair, which is why we sing those words, absentmindedly, when we fold clothes or put on our pajamas. (The air in this house is stuffy with all that we don’t know how phrase just right) And yet, the sun licks the morning off of Dallas and all that carved a hole in my middle yesterday becomes irrelevant and untrue as I toast the day in honor of these people and this shelter- the glory of a canvass, a picture frame, a blanket from Colorado,  and screws in dry wall So, I write because of the homemade pillows, because of marijuana, because all life is an attachment and I am glad to be attached to all of you I write out of gratefulness, out of understanding I write because I’m with you (with all of you) in Rockland.
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51
la vida es una desilusion, a cigarette burn on the tongue raw taste buds so dull you can’t even feel your husband in your mouth or the aftertaste of ancient oil paint (20 years ago) that you keep in the gaps where your wisdom teeth used to be a midnight snack of remembering, a band-aid for the **** that nicotine abandonment made in you- carved all the way down to your *** angry as a beast, as a midlife crisis, still hung-over from the past ten years staring out these prison red windows life is an illusion, a recollection of a painting life is a city street that these wired eyes can make no sense of at all
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Apr 23, 2014
Apr 23, 2014 at 3:38 PM UTC
Red Windows