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faith-barron
faith-barron
I'm not sure what to say if I don't really know who I am, where home is or where I'll be going. Time follows me but somehow I can't seem to grab hold and go along with it. Every now and then I see a splash of color that calls and I think I know where to go...maybe I will find it soon.....
Back and forth. Back and forth. Pigs, chickens, goats, ducks, geese, turkeys; feed them all. Always as a girl she walked without shoes. She played in the mud and yet was still beautiful. Up and down she chased that boy. The painter boy; the one who did not all that much care for mud. The big man with the heavy boots stopped coming here; many years ago he stopped. The three ladies with the pointy shoes came then. I became ridden with new holes and dips daily. I became even more worn and torn up. One would think I spent all my time with the likes of chickens; continuously pecking and clawing and picking. Ripping me away from myself layer by layer. Mostly I waited; waited for all of them to just leave. Leave her to her farm. To her animals. To her life. One night, just as the sun decided to sleep, she left; slipping away. The ladies with the pointed shoes were gone. She was leaving too. But mercy! Her feet were not bare and her calluses were hidden. I knew soon life for us all would change. For on her feet there was something new. Glass slippers soft as silk caressed my face. The hems of white satin and silk slipped over my eyes carefully. She was afraid but anticipation shook her breath, and weighed her feet. I wished her luck and sent warm prayers up through me. I waited patiently, the rain pounded rudely upon me and the night raced on. It held feelings of pain but also of hope, and I waited. After humiliation and hurt passed, carrying defiance and anger with them, joy and happiness exploded in the air as forgiveness spread silently around. Satisfaction crept slyly in and decided to stay. With petty arrogance the three of them pranced; down the steps and across my face, stabbing me with every new step. They laughed and taunted and gossiped, reveling in what splendor they thought they had, and the royalty they believed they deservedly were to receive. With false fragility they were lifted into the coach where they sat with straight backs, gloved hands, bejeweled everywhere they could be... The ladies with the pointed shoes didn’t come back. No, but she did. Of course she did, she had to say So long for now, even though every once and awhile she’d be back. Now someone else would tend the pigs, the chickens, the goats and ducks and geese and turkeys. Someone else with calloused feet and a ragged dress would walk me over each morning. But I didn’t care. I smiled, that is, if dirt can do such things. Cause as sure as anything in the world, she was happy.
0
Sep 9, 2015
Sep 9, 2015 at 11:32 PM UTC
Pathway
Back and forth. Back and forth. Pigs, chickens, goats, ducks, geese, turkeys; feed them all. Always as a girl she walked without shoes. She played in the mud and yet was still beautiful. Up and down she chased that boy. The painter boy; the one who did not all that much care for mud. The big man with the heavy boots stopped coming here; many years ago he stopped. The three ladies with the pointy shoes came then. I became ridden with new holes and dips daily. I became even more worn and torn up. One would think I spent all my time with the likes of chickens; continuously pecking and clawing and picking. Ripping me away from myself layer by layer. Mostly I waited; waited for all of them to just leave. Leave her to her farm. To her animals. To her life. One night, just as the sun decided to sleep, she left; slipping away. The ladies with the pointed shoes were gone. She was leaving too. But mercy! Her feet were not bare and her calluses were hidden. I knew soon life for us all would change. For on her feet there was something new. Glass slippers soft as silk caressed my face. The hems of white satin and silk slipped over my eyes carefully. She was afraid but anticipation shook her breath, and weighed her feet. I wished her luck and sent warm prayers up through me. I waited patiently, the rain pounded rudely upon me and the night raced on. It held feelings of pain but also of hope, and I waited. After humiliation and hurt passed, carrying defiance and anger with them, joy and happiness exploded in the air as forgiveness spread silently around. Satisfaction crept slyly in and decided to stay. With petty arrogance the three of them pranced; down the steps and across my face, stabbing me with every new step. They laughed and taunted and gossiped, reveling in what splendor they thought they had, and the royalty they believed they deservedly were to receive. With false fragility they were lifted into the coach where they sat with straight backs, gloved hands, bejeweled everywhere they could be... The ladies with the pointed shoes didn’t come back. No, but she did. Of course she did, she had to say So long for now, even though every once and awhile she’d be back. Now someone else would tend the pigs, the chickens, the goats and ducks and geese and turkeys. Someone else with calloused feet and a ragged dress would walk me over each morning. But I didn’t care. I smiled, that is, if dirt can do such things. Cause as sure as anything in the world, she was happy.
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68
Many hands had flipped my pages; none so cold and tiny as hers. She was a little girl when her father picked me up; stuck me in his saddle bag and brought me to her. At first, it was he who would speak the words that my weakening pages provided. He would read them confidently; a voice for every character and dramatic pauses when he deemed it necessary. Always she listened intently. As if her father could truly create the world that only my pages would ever hold; my pages and her imagination. Her little face would peer over her father’s arm. She could read, but she liked it better when she could hear him. She liked his voice. I liked his fingers. He was so gentle; Never tore a single page, and every night, after he’d tucked her in her bed, he’d tuck me inside the bedside drawer to await another night. I remember her eyes; how they’d shine. And her little laugh and her smile, sometimes quivering as the story strayed from a happy ending. She loved it all the same. Then, the father with the gentle hands and loud voice didn’t come back. The girl held me to her chest under the bed clothes and cried. Not a sobbing, feel-sorry-for-me cry; a still and silent cry. A cry where the tears just seem to have been willed out of nowhere; only to pour down her face. Beginning that night, I was the only thing she read. My pages became stained with the work of her day; as I always remained tucked inside her apron pocket. She never set me down. As the years carried by, wretched people entered the house. They sold the fine things of the gentle-handed man. The girl with the bright eyes grew dim; She worked, she read. she slept. She slept in the ash. As close to the fire as she could without burning. There was no bed left in the barons’ house; just a fireplace full of cinder and ash. My spine crackled and snapped, my pages frayed and fanned out. My corners yellowed and curled. The fire scorched small fibers of me; and I earned the name well-loved. But I as myself was not loved; no, I was loved as the gentle-handed man. It pained me to feel the hands that should have been so dainty, pass coarsely across my paper, as if made of leather. Then something happened. Something happened that made the coarse-handed girl with the ***** apron become careless. She went away for hours and left me crunched in the apron pocket. I never knew where she was, but when she would return she held me close, but did not read a word before falling asleep. At night her dreams flowed from her pointed fingertips. A boy danced there. A handsome one. One who wore a crown. On one such day, I was forgotten upon the table; I waited. I wondered if she would read today. Would she remember the world inside my wilting pages? As I thought this I heard cries and screams; feet stamped over the floorboards. A new hand picked me up. Her fingers were long and soft. But were they warm or cold? She swung me through the air and held me high over her head. I could not see, but the sound of heavy breathing blocked out the world. Begging; she was begging. They both were begging, at least one was. The other was demanding, the fingers that held me shook ever so slightly. And I was flying. I was flying down. And she was screaming. Sobs, hard crashing screaming sobs. I was burning. God help me; I was burning.
0
Sep 9, 2015
Sep 9, 2015 at 11:30 PM UTC
Utopia
Many hands had flipped my pages; none so cold and tiny as hers. She was a little girl when her father picked me up; stuck me in his saddle bag and brought me to her. At first, it was he who would speak the words that my weakening pages provided. He would read them confidently; a voice for every character and dramatic pauses when he deemed it necessary. Always she listened intently. As if her father could truly create the world that only my pages would ever hold; my pages and her imagination. Her little face would peer over her father’s arm. She could read, but she liked it better when she could hear him. She liked his voice. I liked his fingers. He was so gentle; Never tore a single page, and every night, after he’d tucked her in her bed, he’d tuck me inside the bedside drawer to await another night. I remember her eyes; how they’d shine. And her little laugh and her smile, sometimes quivering as the story strayed from a happy ending. She loved it all the same. Then, the father with the gentle hands and loud voice didn’t come back. The girl held me to her chest under the bed clothes and cried. Not a sobbing, feel-sorry-for-me cry; a still and silent cry. A cry where the tears just seem to have been willed out of nowhere; only to pour down her face. Beginning that night, I was the only thing she read. My pages became stained with the work of her day; as I always remained tucked inside her apron pocket. She never set me down. As the years carried by, wretched people entered the house. They sold the fine things of the gentle-handed man. The girl with the bright eyes grew dim; She worked, she read. she slept. She slept in the ash. As close to the fire as she could without burning. There was no bed left in the barons’ house; just a fireplace full of cinder and ash. My spine crackled and snapped, my pages frayed and fanned out. My corners yellowed and curled. The fire scorched small fibers of me; and I earned the name well-loved. But I as myself was not loved; no, I was loved as the gentle-handed man. It pained me to feel the hands that should have been so dainty, pass coarsely across my paper, as if made of leather. Then something happened. Something happened that made the coarse-handed girl with the ***** apron become careless. She went away for hours and left me crunched in the apron pocket. I never knew where she was, but when she would return she held me close, but did not read a word before falling asleep. At night her dreams flowed from her pointed fingertips. A boy danced there. A handsome one. One who wore a crown. On one such day, I was forgotten upon the table; I waited. I wondered if she would read today. Would she remember the world inside my wilting pages? As I thought this I heard cries and screams; feet stamped over the floorboards. A new hand picked me up. Her fingers were long and soft. But were they warm or cold? She swung me through the air and held me high over her head. I could not see, but the sound of heavy breathing blocked out the world. Begging; she was begging. They both were begging, at least one was. The other was demanding, the fingers that held me shook ever so slightly. And I was flying. I was flying down. And she was screaming. Sobs, hard crashing screaming sobs. I was burning. God help me; I was burning.
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86
One toe, then all five, and then ten. She’s come, stepping carefully into the bed that I create. Soft, but terribly hard. Every night it is this way. I smile, wishing she could see; that she could know, I would wrap her up, had I the arms to do so. Heat; the allure. Sinking carefully to her knees, then to lay on her side. Her feet, calloused, and blackened with resistance face towards the flames. Her dreams are peaceful; wait, they are not. Her toes clench. I rub into her as the pressure of her dreams forces her legs to move. I feel sad. Her dainty feet, tainted now, yet I cannot pull away. The grey of me stains her. Shaking the nightmare away she moves closer to the fire. Her dishwater hair passing ignorantly through me. I cling tightly to every strand. Particle by tiny particle, pieces of my heart leave the hearth. Painting her cheeks dull, and her feet rough. As she sleeps, I analyze her. As she turns her face into the ground I see her eyes. Behind her swollen lids her eyes do not move quickly. Her sleep is light. Shame twists within me. Laced through her lashes, I see myself. Almost like snow, but not quite good enough; not beautiful or crisp enough. This night will be no different than the rest. I attempt to cover her knowing the fire isn’t enough. I tarnish her clothes when all I wish is to make her warm! Frustrated and unhappy for another night, I do not move. When the rooster awakens and he screeches his nasty alarm; I feel her sigh. She is aware enough to know that although it is yet dark the day has begun. With a certain mock fluidity she sits, kneels, and then stands. Making no sound I scream as I break. Leaning back she shakes out her hair, letting it fall past her waist. I fall to the cold floor, warm in places from where she heated it. She braids the strands together, sometimes enveloping me. As she stretches I continue to drop; from her arms, her shoulders, her back. Bending forwards she shakes me from her apron. I fly far and close and smash into the floor. She throws more wood into the fire; blowing the coals to recreate the flame. As she turns her braid whips air behind her, and she walks away. Leaving me with myself as the air slowly leaves me, and I dissipate, every molecule of me settling somewhere else, upon the floor where she slept.
0
Sep 9, 2015
Sep 9, 2015 at 11:29 PM UTC
Ashes
One toe, then all five, and then ten. She’s come, stepping carefully into the bed that I create. Soft, but terribly hard. Every night it is this way. I smile, wishing she could see; that she could know, I would wrap her up, had I the arms to do so. Heat; the allure. Sinking carefully to her knees, then to lay on her side. Her feet, calloused, and blackened with resistance face towards the flames. Her dreams are peaceful; wait, they are not. Her toes clench. I rub into her as the pressure of her dreams forces her legs to move. I feel sad. Her dainty feet, tainted now, yet I cannot pull away. The grey of me stains her. Shaking the nightmare away she moves closer to the fire. Her dishwater hair passing ignorantly through me. I cling tightly to every strand. Particle by tiny particle, pieces of my heart leave the hearth. Painting her cheeks dull, and her feet rough. As she sleeps, I analyze her. As she turns her face into the ground I see her eyes. Behind her swollen lids her eyes do not move quickly. Her sleep is light. Shame twists within me. Laced through her lashes, I see myself. Almost like snow, but not quite good enough; not beautiful or crisp enough. This night will be no different than the rest. I attempt to cover her knowing the fire isn’t enough. I tarnish her clothes when all I wish is to make her warm! Frustrated and unhappy for another night, I do not move. When the rooster awakens and he screeches his nasty alarm; I feel her sigh. She is aware enough to know that although it is yet dark the day has begun. With a certain mock fluidity she sits, kneels, and then stands. Making no sound I scream as I break. Leaning back she shakes out her hair, letting it fall past her waist. I fall to the cold floor, warm in places from where she heated it. She braids the strands together, sometimes enveloping me. As she stretches I continue to drop; from her arms, her shoulders, her back. Bending forwards she shakes me from her apron. I fly far and close and smash into the floor. She throws more wood into the fire; blowing the coals to recreate the flame. As she turns her braid whips air behind her, and she walks away. Leaving me with myself as the air slowly leaves me, and I dissipate, every molecule of me settling somewhere else, upon the floor where she slept.
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50
Today was meant for happiness for giving and remembrance time spent with the people you love your family. Time to cook and bake sing songs and share news get out the old photo albums laugh together. A day when things are thrown away past is the past and smiles are wide snowflakes snow globe around the house church bells ring. Its supposed to be warm comfortable the music is soft candles burn and glow my dog sleeps. Yet, I can't stay there I can't look at their faces I seclude myself alone. It hurts to be here where I haven't been and try to pretend that its nice. I'm not happy here but today is for the present today is for giving thanks today is about smiles. The image here is but a skeleton of me the person that everyone remembers wishes was still here. Happy Thanksgiving.
0
Nov 28, 2013
Nov 28, 2013 at 1:19 PM UTC
Why am still I sad?
Rambling on The houses ring With the voices That try and claim This is their home It is As it always will be a safe place One where each of us Will hold memories Memories that bring Tears Joy Pain ....And Happiness
0
Nov 16, 2013
Nov 16, 2013 at 6:54 PM UTC
this moment
Outside still clouds gather Here inside I don’t understand What hole I am And what it means On the leaves and grass the mist clings I hurt And try to find What reason I have For this anger I hold Shaken by the breeze, Drops of water fall I want it to leave And not say goodbye I have no love for it Here it hurts and eats away At all I have made Of my heart and soul But now this anger Deep and awful Rumbles along With approaching thunder Haunts And I try To rid myself of the pain Look away from the quick flashes But without a source A reason why I cannot solve This mess inside and Lightning slashes, branches bow and I hurt Cause it won’t go away And I feel as if all I have to say is To hell with Everything and everyone As precipitation swirls and clouds darken further Because all that matters Is the tornado that holds All my organs and emotions Crashing and churning In one same whirling vortex But I know that it’s wrong To me so self-righteous As wind breaks and takes I cannot stand The ones who seem to Indeed share my own fault For the ones with whom you share Are the souls upon whom you are the harshest And I do not like to admit To the things that make me Like all the rest I am cruel I do bad things I am mean I hurt I am human I am caring I am soft I hold I break I am ashamed To be who I am walking a two way street I attempt to hold my head high Because I know what is right But other minds won’t agree The trees who’s leaves the storm has taken Yearn for them once more My head chases me in circles So to confuse me And I begin to cry out But the storm recedes In frustration and fury At my own head’s distaste And demure I am not who I want to be This storm has changed And I am not the perfection That is trained into the lines That wind and rain have worn On my personality Perfection for me and all is impossible As the definition of human is As it may be imperfection Created as rain falls Only to be replaced by sun As fate would have it And so my anger flows slower The pound of the thunder stole my force In naught but words One might read And empathize Although I do not ask it As this is what I have brought Down upon the back of myself With all the things that I have done And through this rambling anger And broken chaos swirling leaves, water and dirt I find my answer And no longer feel the sick Stone in the pit of my soul That a flash and rumbling boom removed Perhaps I am no longer as angry and sick Or perhaps I just cannot feel it as strongly For I fear that I am angry With myself For my own imperfection As I have moved from the clouds For that is who and what I am As fate may have it I have been centered In the eye However, I am human
0
Nov 3, 2013
Nov 3, 2013 at 11:01 PM UTC
Inside Here
Outside still clouds gather Here inside I don’t understand What hole I am And what it means On the leaves and grass the mist clings I hurt And try to find What reason I have For this anger I hold Shaken by the breeze, Drops of water fall I want it to leave And not say goodbye I have no love for it Here it hurts and eats away At all I have made Of my heart and soul But now this anger Deep and awful Rumbles along With approaching thunder Haunts And I try To rid myself of the pain Look away from the quick flashes But without a source A reason why I cannot solve This mess inside and Lightning slashes, branches bow and I hurt Cause it won’t go away And I feel as if all I have to say is To hell with Everything and everyone As precipitation swirls and clouds darken further Because all that matters Is the tornado that holds All my organs and emotions Crashing and churning In one same whirling vortex But I know that it’s wrong To me so self-righteous As wind breaks and takes I cannot stand The ones who seem to Indeed share my own fault For the ones with whom you share Are the souls upon whom you are the harshest And I do not like to admit To the things that make me Like all the rest I am cruel I do bad things I am mean I hurt I am human I am caring I am soft I hold I break I am ashamed To be who I am walking a two way street I attempt to hold my head high Because I know what is right But other minds won’t agree The trees who’s leaves the storm has taken Yearn for them once more My head chases me in circles So to confuse me And I begin to cry out But the storm recedes In frustration and fury At my own head’s distaste And demure I am not who I want to be This storm has changed And I am not the perfection That is trained into the lines That wind and rain have worn On my personality Perfection for me and all is impossible As the definition of human is As it may be imperfection Created as rain falls Only to be replaced by sun As fate would have it And so my anger flows slower The pound of the thunder stole my force In naught but words One might read And empathize Although I do not ask it As this is what I have brought Down upon the back of myself With all the things that I have done And through this rambling anger And broken chaos swirling leaves, water and dirt I find my answer And no longer feel the sick Stone in the pit of my soul That a flash and rumbling boom removed Perhaps I am no longer as angry and sick Or perhaps I just cannot feel it as strongly For I fear that I am angry With myself For my own imperfection As I have moved from the clouds For that is who and what I am As fate may have it I have been centered In the eye However, I am human
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116
June eighth: That random warm summer day I heard That in the hospital, an hour away There was a room where my father lay; Surrounded by doctors and nurses, Conscious as they pushed, a wire up and into his brain; To remove the thing, that awful thing That could take my father away forever. A blood clot that sat unaware in his vein; One stroke that minimized everything. From the time of the phone call I sat in my room Isolating myself Coping with my thoughts as best I could I wondered if he was ok We went to see him for the first time, On Father’s Day: My 11 year old little sister and I Balloons and cake and presents. All smiles so as not to make it worse. When I saw him I bit my lip, That warm coppery taste filled my mouth Instead of the tears that would have been. When he talked his words slurred, uneven He saw the pain in my eyes and tried to seem more himself, He tried to sit up and straighten, But he had lost much of his strength and could not. I sat with him, next to his bed My mind numb and afraid The only noise the underlining sound of the TV After a time he reached over with his good arm and squeezed mine Just like he always does But his voice wavered, And something new became clear to me. Even as he was still my father and alive He was no longer the father Made to be immortal to a small child: Someone that is always there No matter what, never going away, But that is not an immortal idea. It is but what it is What people want it to be; Its not truth. For, at any second anywhere My father can be taken from me. Now life tells me that my father is mortal. Just like any other He works to regain what was lost; Step by step, New things return. But still some evade him And he sometimes saddens, Mourning his taste, or strength in a hand or finger. Ideas are immortal and ever changing Their creators however, meet their own end, And one time or another are taught why… Perhaps for my father this is but a life lesson. And perhaps he will learn from it. Perhaps the lesson wasn’t only for him.
0
Nov 3, 2013
Nov 3, 2013 at 11:01 PM UTC
What Once Was Immortal
June eighth: That random warm summer day I heard That in the hospital, an hour away There was a room where my father lay; Surrounded by doctors and nurses, Conscious as they pushed, a wire up and into his brain; To remove the thing, that awful thing That could take my father away forever. A blood clot that sat unaware in his vein; One stroke that minimized everything. From the time of the phone call I sat in my room Isolating myself Coping with my thoughts as best I could I wondered if he was ok We went to see him for the first time, On Father’s Day: My 11 year old little sister and I Balloons and cake and presents. All smiles so as not to make it worse. When I saw him I bit my lip, That warm coppery taste filled my mouth Instead of the tears that would have been. When he talked his words slurred, uneven He saw the pain in my eyes and tried to seem more himself, He tried to sit up and straighten, But he had lost much of his strength and could not. I sat with him, next to his bed My mind numb and afraid The only noise the underlining sound of the TV After a time he reached over with his good arm and squeezed mine Just like he always does But his voice wavered, And something new became clear to me. Even as he was still my father and alive He was no longer the father Made to be immortal to a small child: Someone that is always there No matter what, never going away, But that is not an immortal idea. It is but what it is What people want it to be; Its not truth. For, at any second anywhere My father can be taken from me. Now life tells me that my father is mortal. Just like any other He works to regain what was lost; Step by step, New things return. But still some evade him And he sometimes saddens, Mourning his taste, or strength in a hand or finger. Ideas are immortal and ever changing Their creators however, meet their own end, And one time or another are taught why… Perhaps for my father this is but a life lesson. And perhaps he will learn from it. Perhaps the lesson wasn’t only for him.
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60
Flutter and Float Flip and dive Leaves a boat The King arrived Folded wings Heads bowed low The larks sing Their King walks straight and slow And as he passes His folk all breathe For his power surpasses As evil did seethe And he rose up His arms above his head Magicked nectar in his cup The King’s grace and power did spread And so the evil did recede Lifted the voices did sing All evil fled with haste and speed Now all was well in land of the Faery King Flutter and Float Flip and dive Leaves a boat The King arrived
0
Nov 3, 2013
Nov 3, 2013 at 11:00 PM UTC
Faery King
The mist curled around the street, Lamplights flickering in and out, The birds soon were awake. The wind had crashed, high and mighty, But then all was still: The mist faded slowly away; I watched, taking each blow. Bruises merged together pain soon forgotten. Then from the dream; she reappeared Stepping forward from every direction, Thin and beautiful as before, Your eyes brightened and head heightened, You step quickly towards her. The life that had left, to you returned. She held your hand and held you tight You smiled back, eyes squeezed tightly shut; She pushed you away unwrapping herself. And, once more, you were let go As she picked out another heart, But in you, her hook still caught Rusted and ****** you took no notice Her hold too strong and unyielding But still she stood at a distance. You waited there. Until she called It hurt you that she was gone, Your heart left torn and raw, The iron hooks pulling taught. In and out of your vision she danced, Around you she twirled, Growing dizzy you knelt on the ground. Down, I reached, and picked you up Still, she kept on dancing, She left whispering—she She so righteous must not let go, But managed to fall to temptation. Her desire to please yet another And yet, the vain hook still attached, If only low confidence would grow And dreams that lie would quickly fade, But fast reminders coat the minefield. You want the dream that is her love: She held the key to you, hers the power. Of course she never completely left She stood tall but wanted you there She needed you; she would not give It hurt to see, to know it wrong There came time when there was nothing, Then you fell, you became hers, hers always, Terrible, real and dead: I watched And saw and heard all that passed With one small hand she moved And stuck inside you Hook upon hook. The pull you felt You felt it, with longing passion. You looked and saw with eyes of a child, Knowing the lie but pretending to believe: I gag and retch in disgusted sadness, I set down and gather my breath Your hands caress; you cling to her Hers is a hand you will never let go: You let her lean when she needed, Only, now you exhausted her care Her life many times you saved: And she stood tall again and smiling, But when yours was a life worth saving, Where was she, if not by your side You she scorned, but perhaps for good reason I stepped over, and I reached down By each hand I pulled you up Your care for her, was all to see I cared for you, as you did me But our friendship did not last Because it will always be she Who carries the hooks in her hands That will claim your priority. And that is how it will always be.
0
Nov 3, 2013
Nov 3, 2013 at 10:58 PM UTC
Killed
The mist curled around the street, Lamplights flickering in and out, The birds soon were awake. The wind had crashed, high and mighty, But then all was still: The mist faded slowly away; I watched, taking each blow. Bruises merged together pain soon forgotten. Then from the dream; she reappeared Stepping forward from every direction, Thin and beautiful as before, Your eyes brightened and head heightened, You step quickly towards her. The life that had left, to you returned. She held your hand and held you tight You smiled back, eyes squeezed tightly shut; She pushed you away unwrapping herself. And, once more, you were let go As she picked out another heart, But in you, her hook still caught Rusted and ****** you took no notice Her hold too strong and unyielding But still she stood at a distance. You waited there. Until she called It hurt you that she was gone, Your heart left torn and raw, The iron hooks pulling taught. In and out of your vision she danced, Around you she twirled, Growing dizzy you knelt on the ground. Down, I reached, and picked you up Still, she kept on dancing, She left whispering—she She so righteous must not let go, But managed to fall to temptation. Her desire to please yet another And yet, the vain hook still attached, If only low confidence would grow And dreams that lie would quickly fade, But fast reminders coat the minefield. You want the dream that is her love: She held the key to you, hers the power. Of course she never completely left She stood tall but wanted you there She needed you; she would not give It hurt to see, to know it wrong There came time when there was nothing, Then you fell, you became hers, hers always, Terrible, real and dead: I watched And saw and heard all that passed With one small hand she moved And stuck inside you Hook upon hook. The pull you felt You felt it, with longing passion. You looked and saw with eyes of a child, Knowing the lie but pretending to believe: I gag and retch in disgusted sadness, I set down and gather my breath Your hands caress; you cling to her Hers is a hand you will never let go: You let her lean when she needed, Only, now you exhausted her care Her life many times you saved: And she stood tall again and smiling, But when yours was a life worth saving, Where was she, if not by your side You she scorned, but perhaps for good reason I stepped over, and I reached down By each hand I pulled you up Your care for her, was all to see I cared for you, as you did me But our friendship did not last Because it will always be she Who carries the hooks in her hands That will claim your priority. And that is how it will always be.
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76
If you love me, then leave me alone I’m done I can’t take your lies, anymore I’m finished and hurt my mind is sore I can’t capture the meaning anymore You bring back memories that don’t exist The lies of you are a boiling cyst And at the same time a ruined bond I can resist The pain and hurt you gave will just make me stronger Just leave me alone! The pictures piled by stack in the bins, Remind me of my childhood False reality that I thought was good In every picture you took I saw his face; at you he’d smile Give and get, but he went the extra mile You took and took, then both to trial He trusted you and your loving look we all did until we were stuck with pins Just leave me alone!
0
Nov 3, 2013
Nov 3, 2013 at 10:57 PM UTC
If