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craigverlin
American
when the sun might set forever and the anywhere of where you are might just be the right place at that moment to be, so long as you take a long pause—maybe waiting on the crosswalk while that last car swings past right at the red, or maybe watching the elevator ping to ground level and letting the old woman step out first with her bags—and use that silent moment to see the Sun again and notice it there even now, this late in the game, and if it can hang as heavy as a thousand earths a thousand times over up there in that big stretch of sky and space then so can you, right there wherever you are.
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Jul 17, 2022
Jul 17, 2022 at 11:08 PM UTC
These Summer Days
A turbid river with little current, a roughened stone half-submerged and softening in the stream. There is a contradicting endlessness to things, even as everything ebbs toward nonexistence. The staid trunk of the oak tree sits solid on the hillside and its rings measure the infinite. Memories that linger are both yesterday and forever ago. A turbid river with little current, a stone sinking in the mud and eroding. The shadows shift slightly to the left forever. The end of long a long trip, the endless handshake of time, candlewax pooling in a tin as the flame burns out.
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Jul 11, 2022
Jul 11, 2022 at 11:10 AM UTC
Slow Burn
Is it morning? I think I imagine it as a spring morning—you with a coffee mug in both hands, the early breeze sweeping through the white curtains of your bedroom, and the just-now-breaking coverage of clouds parted by the rising sunlight like the words of a lover passing through gray lips. It is not quite spring here, but you can tell that the world is beginning to awaken to itself. The trees fight to bloom just as we must have once, two strangers scrambling out of the darkness. I remember you as a child in large mittens, hands always cold even later when your fingers had become long, sensual, and painted dark against your now-gray-but-once-red lips. The most basic of desires is that pit-of-stomach desire for a loved one’s happiness, wherever it is that they may be. And so I hope that you are happy. I hope that the wind blows the sunlight in through open curtain windows softly like a whispered word and the coffee is always just warm enough to keep your fingers from the chill and that it is always spring, wherever you are.
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Jul 11, 2022
Jul 11, 2022 at 11:06 AM UTC
Is it Spring where you are?
How many years has it been now? Filing cabinets full of minutes/hours/days. A lifetime outlined in manila folder. Five times now, it says in your record, but where are the receipts? Who falls in love and doesn’t get a receipt? You can write it off and claim it as a loss at the very least. It has been seven years since anything happened, another thirteen since anything made sense. The numbers don’t add up. Where did the years go? Each of their folder slim as if they were never there at all. Placeholders of a life lived in hole-punched margins.
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Jul 11, 2022
Jul 11, 2022 at 11:03 AM UTC
Audit
You are the age that I was when we met. I have become an artifact: vestigial, an older version of a thing no longer necessary, a tool of stone tied with fraying string in a world moving on toward bronze. An archaeologist digs up my bones and scratches his head. He cannot fathom what they were for except in relation to you.
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Jul 11, 2022
Jul 11, 2022 at 10:59 AM UTC
Artifacts
I remember we took a walk most days that allowed it. In step down the sidewalks, we might have laughed at something or another that I had said, there was plenty of laughter to go around then—and plenty of sidewalks. They stretched around the river and laced up the streets past the gym where we met towards the house that became our home. Walking back, you might have smiled or playfully slapped away my hand from the small of your back before leaning in to kiss my cheek. Affection was neither of our strong suits but it was a suit you wore better than I did. I remember you wore a black coat on our first date and shrugged out of it as we walked up to the restaurant—baring a lone shoulder and my first glimpse into your past. I held the door and you rearranged your hair, hiding it again. I remember the scar was barely noticeable then, me just a stranger and concerned with so many other things. How would the food taste? How would the service be? Would you like me enough to walk those sidewalks home for another drink? It was not until later that I would find out what a burden that small slip of flesh truly was. I remember you had a slight fear of those sidewalk cellar doors, just enough to step around them each time with a bit of a blush on your cheek as if it were something to be ashamed of. How strange, these things you remember. This place to me now is not a city, but an old ruin full and full of sidewalks and, like a child with imagined lava, I fear to touch them for the burn of what remembrance they might bring.
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Mar 8, 2022
Mar 8, 2022 at 9:40 PM UTC
Sidewalks
I remember we took a walk most days that allowed it. In step down the sidewalks, we might have laughed at something or another that I had said, there was plenty of laughter to go around then—and plenty of sidewalks. They stretched around the river and laced up the streets past the gym where we met towards the house that became our home. Walking back, you might have smiled or playfully slapped away my hand from the small of your back before leaning in to kiss my cheek. Affection was neither of our strong suits but it was a suit you wore better than I did. I remember you wore a black coat on our first date and shrugged out of it as we walked up to the restaurant—baring a lone shoulder and my first glimpse into your past. I held the door and you rearranged your hair, hiding it again. I remember the scar was barely noticeable then, me just a stranger and concerned with so many other things. How would the food taste? How would the service be? Would you like me enough to walk those sidewalks home for another drink? It was not until later that I would find out what a burden that small slip of flesh truly was. I remember you had a slight fear of those sidewalk cellar doors, just enough to step around them each time with a bit of a blush on your cheek as if it were something to be ashamed of. How strange, these things you remember. This place to me now is not a city, but an old ruin full and full of sidewalks and, like a child with imagined lava, I fear to touch them for the burn of what remembrance they might bring.
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45
Tied to the world by the hands of grocery clerks, by the blue aprons of baristas and the fresh smells of cut bagels in morning market stalls. Tied to the world by parked cars in parallel lines, construction cranes climbing back to life. The moorings of a vast and darkening ocean, an anchor tied with twine and small impersonal smiles of welcome. Tied to the world by tall vines of ivy like scoliosis spines rooting themselves upward in the chipped bricks of abandoned factory buildings. Tied to the world by small strings to hold us against ourselves, small cracks in sidewalk pavements where grass might one day grow again. The earth spins at a bearable speed when the morning peeks through curtained townhouse windows on a quiet city block and the birds make just enough noise to be beautiful.
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Nov 12, 2021
Nov 12, 2021 at 6:41 PM UTC
Strings
Where there was once noisy trips to the beach—to sneak away with each other in the surf and plant kisses on the tops of each other's ears —there is now only silence. Where there was once loud lines of poetry brought to life in the screams of youth—in anger and in sadness and in love —there is now only silence. Where there was once dance floors and dresses— the music of a million lovers clasping hands and setting their feet in steps against one other —there is now… The inventory is unpacked and counted up from each of those long hours I have carried since those pale blue cottages on the beach, since the barroom poetry readings and the holiday dances. The shell no longer sings the ocean. The sounds that filled the vessel have all but gone away from us now.
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Jul 30, 2021
Jul 30, 2021 at 10:43 AM UTC
Taking Stock
Just turned nineteen, we sat along the bottom of the bunk bed— holding hands and nothing else —reading from the big compilation of Bukowski poems that I kept folded up and tucked in a pocket of my backpack as an anchor through those early years. The cottage was empty and quiet except the circling ache of the ceiling fan. Only blocks from the northern shore, the others had gone to lay blankets in the sand—even in a mid-spring chill, with sweaters on—to drink the cheap wine we stole from the corner store. You told me you enjoyed Bukowski because he gave voice to a self that you had never known you had. A self you wanted to explore and better understand. You—with your suburban, two-car garage upbringing—had never smoked a cigarette until we met. In the million hours since that hour that we sat and took turns yelling out lines of “Bluebird” to get a better feel for the words as they took shape in our mouths, there have been more cigarettes. There have been more drugs that left our outlines in sweat stains on the mattress. There have been more broken glasses, shards in-between our toes, and mistake tattoos penned in our skin. There have been more falling-outs and car crashes and fathers with voiced, finger shaking disapprovals. There have been more curses and hospital visits and apology letters turned to kindling or tucked in drawers to be left behind. There have been fewer poems.
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Jul 30, 2021
Jul 30, 2021 at 10:39 AM UTC
A Decade, Unpacking
She put out the cigarette in the soft part of my leg, twisting, folding, pressing ash to puckered skin. Her eyes never left mine—not for a moment—no one said a word. The hairs stood on ends. The hands clenched in fists. The cigarette ground from flame into ash into skin and the endless smoke curled up around us, bodies open and waiting for a feeling that would not come.
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Jul 7, 2021
Jul 7, 2021 at 2:34 PM UTC
She put out the cigarette