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eilise-norris
English Even if you stared at me side-on, you couldn't catch the way that I scratch my ear.
The nightmares are back. I count the time to their deaths. Women live longer than men, on average. Mum has osteoporosis. When I was 6, I gave myself 40 years. That's how I planned never to miss them. Children need parents, I reasoned. We had a close family of 3. Gave up the rest, like old clothes. Good people shouldn't keep more than they need. Then my sister happened- just that wish for her changed matters. Then the math became too hard. How much time does anyone want? How long to buy me a house with big windows? The ground doesn't open to take you, you know? The heart doesn't know when to stop. Hands- that's what makes an end. Hands and a cut-throat mind. I had nightmares. Big Ben counting down. The terror of screaming out, with no-one to come.
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Jan 3, 2013
Jan 3, 2013 at 5:59 PM UTC
The Math
I live under a train track, lean on rumbling walls sounds like a thousand chit chats, sounds like a ball but I am a man who shouts for echoes or says nothing at all
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Sep 18, 2012
Sep 18, 2012 at 6:12 PM UTC
How to make sense
The world is a whistling place when your skirt's up a sharp glint in a fallen park when you're alone but you're a cat more fur than muscled bone winding round the world's poles begging to be owned.
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Sep 18, 2012
Sep 18, 2012 at 6:06 PM UTC
A cat
When offspring were issue, they were blank tickets -women hid them, surreptitious, behind their shoulders- but the eldest of course, that wasn’t your choice. That was in their polished hands, their pouring legs. Boys with raucous claim tore whole thrones asunder, girls in their raw places to bear them more sons, becoming mothers with laden arms, bathing in their blood. Vitality is stamped, tattooed on the womb and then christened: go anywhere, but leave. Worse still, if she were a dry well: groaning chasms of grief.
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Oct 5, 2011
Oct 5, 2011 at 9:28 AM UTC
Offspring
It must be nice not to eat dinner in silence (or alone), not to see her crying as she adds honey to oats, waiting for that spoon to be knocked out of her hands then hear she butters bread on the wrong side. Have conversation like stringed balloons, waving, instead of wrists shaking on counter-tops, spite flaming on black gas hobs, that clutch with their hot prongs. Not to gargle sympathies while packing, catching the backwash of that drink- it’s foul- choked, swallowed too quickly. Ignore her strong, sombre hints of “stay, bear it with me”, cradling her elbows. Say: not today, places to go. And shudder on brass hinges. Grasping at the rail to support my skidding feet at the ice rink one mild day. But I’ve got my own life coming, my own sorrows to plunder.
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Oct 5, 2011
Oct 5, 2011 at 9:22 AM UTC
That guilt relies on sympathy