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claireq
today the raindrops are sharp, fine needles injecting novocaine into the back of my exposed skin, my breath heavy from running up the incline as fast as i can to see if a wish came true. and i reach the clearing. gingerly i step onto a new bed of yellow-green moss — soft, springy, cushioning me from what lies beneath — and i stoop down, let my fingertips feel the gentleness within each tiny leaf that absorbs the tears dripping down. and so we finally meet again. despite the ages that have passed i still remember your voice and its mirthful tones telling me you wished to be reborn as none other than moss on the forest floor.
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Mar 27, 2020
Mar 27, 2020 at 6:59 PM UTC
on the forest floor
To this day I hide from my parents the fact that I visit you — a small trail, nestled at the end of a street which meets the view of evergreen mountains and pale waters tinted by an afternoon glow. They fear I'll be attacked when I'm with you — bears rushing up woody slopes to tear my limbs apart or perhaps a stranger shoving me onto sunlit moss, his hand over my mouth whilst chickadees sing sweetly and the ferns sway and the cedars stand stoically. But I know you well — you, with Christmas ornaments still hanging on a pine in March, with the gift of wild blackberries in July, with the tease of a water view in October and the uncovering in December as you strip off, slowly, slowly, the leaves on your deciduous trees.
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Mar 13, 2020
Mar 13, 2020 at 2:11 AM UTC
Risks of Walking at the Trail Near My House
"doctor, after talking to a strange man i began to get the following symptoms: anxiety, depressed mood, chest pain, loss of appetite, obsessive-compulsive thought patterns. i suffer from a loss of productivity ––" and at that the doctor stirred. now i take two a day, pink and blue — one to mellow and the other so i can say "hello" when all other words have flown away on the backs of lovebirds.
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Feb 12, 2020
Feb 12, 2020 at 5:09 PM UTC
why don't you pick it up from your doctor's office?
Vancouver was never prepared for snow and I was never prepared for you. to be sure, I salted the roads fitted my thoughts with winter tires and memorized the emergency codes and sat myself by the fires but here I am, stranded in my head shivering from my imagination into which you tread god I need a vacation but if I see tropical waters in their perfect blue I’ll remember what we said as jade-tinged waves crested and seagulls flew and from paradise I’ll have fled back to traffic jams and black ice my face red from the cold (or is it something else? but I’d think twice about having that thought told).
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Feb 12, 2019
Feb 12, 2019 at 7:22 PM UTC
Snow Day
greenery, that entangled forest mess of autumn leaves and fallen branches — the snapping, the crunch but also muffled dampened rot and the stagnating pool of rainwater the treachery of muddied ground that gives way underneath your weary feet (heels hurting in boots) the smell of decay even as it promises new life — that musk lingering in cold air perfume of the ghosts whose bodies could never hope to decompose so sweetly.
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Oct 31, 2018
Oct 31, 2018 at 8:54 PM UTC
october 31
The old man sits by the ocean, watches the waves crest.  Gnarled hands caress a wooden flute.  He brings it to his lips cracked with age, plays notes with consequence. He hears no more.  He feels only the air whistling out, the vibrations in his fingers that substitute for the sublime he once knew.   It is a paler form of knowledge.  And so he resolves to teach, to animate, to find eyes for unseen light. He knows ripples, the movement of wind and water, the shivering of cold and pleasure and of someone moved — no, displaced, by sound. He draws a crowd.  Lifegivers, he thinks, fertile minds ripe for the planting.  And no two flowers that bloom are the same.  He plays a song whose notes spread as dandelion seed does — flown, twirling, through the medium of air — then taking root through the ears, pushing into crevices, unfurling green buds.
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Aug 19, 2018
Aug 19, 2018 at 2:24 AM UTC
Untitled
Time rattled your fair skin, carved its deep lines Cruel sculptor, that unyielding artist's hand Which stretched drying clay, which let expand Improper shapes with curves that undermined A knife was taken to cheekbones' incline Against gravity, jowls could not withstand Your widow's peak had left but one strand 'Twas not a benevolent god's design. Yet your blue eyes shall never be opaque Lucidity of the mind through them shines As formless light, beyond art's own restraint From time's own sands the glassmaker did take To fashion your clear lenses without taint Though lids may shut, the eyes remain awake.
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May 13, 2018
May 13, 2018 at 8:48 PM UTC
The Glassmaker
Once upon a time, there lived a great bard Who in musical spectacles did star Drenched in cheap spirits, he would stay afloat With tongue of silver and fine-gritted throat. Fish out of water did he seem today For from his audience was he away Their grinning faces now replaced with stone Such tired eyes, all glued to these smartphones. But with a glint in his own eye, he spoke And drew near-instant looks from the young folk How merrily he gestured, how he joked And in new knowledge did the students soak. Apollo, Dionysus: both have blessed This drunken poet on his secret quest.
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May 12, 2018
May 12, 2018 at 7:15 PM UTC
The Local Bard
Pale wisps trailed in front of a rounded moon softening further the light blanketing the white stones of those who had departed too soon. Here they lay in their shrouds formed by absence, the living who are not granted darkness and gentle clouds.
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May 9, 2018
May 9, 2018 at 1:04 AM UTC
The Absence of Darkness
“Bob, I can’t get them to laugh,” 
cried out the director in great distress as she paced, 
glancing back and forth
 between the sullen audience 
and wooden actors. Stony faces, glassy eyes, 
plastic smiles: Bob had bought the wrong components for the production assembly.
 ****** Bob, how much did you spend?” 
Bob shrugged, pulled out 
a handful of change from his pockets. “Back to the store you go, Bob!”
 He fumbled through the shelves, 
cut his finger on an opened can, 
the last one that was labelled 
 “Laughter”.
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Apr 27, 2018
Apr 27, 2018 at 5:08 PM UTC
Canned Laughter