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emililium
emililium
18/F -hopelessly optimistic with a terrible case of the human condition- / / / Instagram & Twitter : @emililium
And when he does not love me anymore, I will build him one last altar, and decide to burn it to the ground. But will only get as far as lighting the match. Thinking about how he used matches for something. Sometime. Probably. I'll brush my teeth, thinking of the gaps between his. How really, it's a great metaphor for the distance between out hearts or something stupid like that. But in the end, it's not a metaphor, or an analogy. They're just teeth. (That could never quite come together kind of like us) I will crawl into bed imagining an alternate universe in which we have started a life together. One where I wake up and reach across the bed for him. Get the kids ready for school, which is funny because in this universe I never wanted children, but in that universe, we created something out of nothing. Something with his eyes, and my nose. A manifestation of the love between two people. Proof that it happened. That is was real. And it was resilient enough to breathe life into a world that only offered it death. In that universe, our hair turns as silver as our wedding rings. And each wrinkle, is a space where our skin just wanted to hold the other person even closer. But here in this harsh reality, time only pulls us apart. And we will likely grow gray with other people now. In this universe, I learn to say goodbye to him. I will build him a library of poems. And decide to burn it to the ground.
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Dec 30, 2017
Dec 30, 2017 at 7:07 PM UTC
And When He Does Not Love Me Anymore
National WWII museum, New Orleans, summer. Somehow we have ended up here. 1,387 miles from home. Here, where war is so close yet so far away. I look at this boy and for a moment I swear his smile looks just like v-day. And his laugh sounds like peace. And when he calls my name through this crowd, It feels just like a homecoming.
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Apr 3, 2017
Apr 3, 2017 at 3:21 PM UTC
7.16.16
1. People say you can tell a lot about a woman's style by what her nails look like. For my mother, acrylics with baby pink sparkly french-tips. For the blonde sitting at the nail dryer, coral. Something about the color looks strange with her new engagement ring. She talks about how the second time she hung out with her fiancé she asked him to paint her nails. Her mother, who she insists she'll pay for, gets french tips. They look new and fresh in contrast to her tarnished wedding ring. The little girl with skinned knees and bug bites sitting in the chair across from me asks for blue polish on her toe nails. Her mother tells her she should get pink. 2. The act of women getting their nails done reminds me of warriors being armed for a fight. long acrylics, pointed, rounded, squared, all fit for different types of battle. Pointed for the woman who has to walk home alone at night, rounded for the woman in the workplace who must work harder than her male co-workers, and square for the woman at home raising her kids to know that strength and kindness are the same thing. 3. The women who work here speak better English than most high school students. And their accents tell stories that I will never know. An older woman speaks loudly and slowly, she treats them as if they do not understand. She will not speak to anyone but the owner; she wants him to translate what she wants to the salon workers. What she doesn't realize is that she is the only person here who doesn't understand. 4. The little girl's doll is named Tessa. She tells me that she likes my hair and shoes, even though she has been told not to talk to strangers twice in the last hour she has been here. She asked her mother for change, we all assume it's for the gumball machine in the corner. She puts all of it in the charity jar. I hope this girl never changes. 5. Having bare nails in a nail salon feels the same as being naked in public. 6. I feel terrible for laughing at the women trying to walk in those little salon flip-flops. Some look like ducks, others look like trained Barbies; marching newly polished, ready for the world to chip away their coating over, and over, and over again.
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Feb 4, 2017
Feb 4, 2017 at 5:04 PM UTC
Thoughts and observations from waiting for my mother at the nail salon.
1. People say you can tell a lot about a woman's style by what her nails look like. For my mother, acrylics with baby pink sparkly french-tips. For the blonde sitting at the nail dryer, coral. Something about the color looks strange with her new engagement ring. She talks about how the second time she hung out with her fiancé she asked him to paint her nails. Her mother, who she insists she'll pay for, gets french tips. They look new and fresh in contrast to her tarnished wedding ring. The little girl with skinned knees and bug bites sitting in the chair across from me asks for blue polish on her toe nails. Her mother tells her she should get pink. 2. The act of women getting their nails done reminds me of warriors being armed for a fight. long acrylics, pointed, rounded, squared, all fit for different types of battle. Pointed for the woman who has to walk home alone at night, rounded for the woman in the workplace who must work harder than her male co-workers, and square for the woman at home raising her kids to know that strength and kindness are the same thing. 3. The women who work here speak better English than most high school students. And their accents tell stories that I will never know. An older woman speaks loudly and slowly, she treats them as if they do not understand. She will not speak to anyone but the owner; she wants him to translate what she wants to the salon workers. What she doesn't realize is that she is the only person here who doesn't understand. 4. The little girl's doll is named Tessa. She tells me that she likes my hair and shoes, even though she has been told not to talk to strangers twice in the last hour she has been here. She asked her mother for change, we all assume it's for the gumball machine in the corner. She puts all of it in the charity jar. I hope this girl never changes. 5. Having bare nails in a nail salon feels the same as being naked in public. 6. I feel terrible for laughing at the women trying to walk in those little salon flip-flops. Some look like ducks, others look like trained Barbies; marching newly polished, ready for the world to chip away their coating over, and over, and over again.
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52
One day you'll wake up and find she has covered the entire house with handmade lace. It's things like that that you love about her. Even though they make it so difficult to get to your car. Nothing about her has ever been easy. She is both peace and upheaval. She is sleeping in white cotton sheets and putting your car in a ditch. She smells like pine and sugar cookies, and she makes you want to catch snowflakes on your tongue; but she's also the reason you're stuck at home running out of food to eat. But after the memories of her, of frost bitten noses and chapped lips, of crowded holiday parties, and apple cider that burns your mouth have all faded away, you will meet this girl and her name is Spring.
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Jan 27, 2017
Jan 27, 2017 at 10:36 PM UTC
A Girl Named Winter
may you learn to be brave and may you always run carefree, certain of your worth and the power inside you. may your song be your own, and when your song is different from the rest, sing louder. may you never forget that you’ve always had wings, and may they carry you far.
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Jan 24, 2017
Jan 24, 2017 at 10:58 PM UTC
a poem for my students
When she walks into your kitchen crying, put down your half scrubbed *** turn off the faucet, wipe the water off of your hands with a white dish towel. Like her eyes are trying to dry themselves on her pale cheeks. You wrap your arms around her and let her cry into your hair. You feel like a mother comforting a child who has just lost their favorite stuffed toy. Her grandfather just passed away, and this is the first time she has left her house since that night. The night she couldn't drive fast enough to say goodbye. You don't wipe the tear from her jaw line. You're afraid your water wrinkled fingers will remind her of him.
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Jan 23, 2017
Jan 23, 2017 at 3:19 PM UTC
Vita brevis
And then the day came, when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk it took to Blossom.
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Jan 22, 2017
Jan 22, 2017 at 5:42 PM UTC
Risk
Maybe it's the poet in me that believes that after all these years, and miles, and songs, that you might untangle yourself from her arms, tug on the string I tied to our fingers before you left, and find your way back to me. Your heart is pulling you across the ocean, to ports with open arms waiting for you; and I'm left here wondering why it wasn't enough that I would have tore out my rib cage and made it into a boat for you to sail yourself there in. I would wait here, at this port that is both where you have been and where you still are, until I turned to stone. It's the poet in me that can't let you go.
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Jan 22, 2017
Jan 22, 2017 at 5:18 PM UTC
The Poet is a Fool