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haus
haus
This is where I put stuff.
No matter how good the intentions are human beings always seem to fall short.  It's unfortunate how late this realization comes, like water to lips that have been thirsty for too long.  I keep picturing you in my kitchen holding a gun to my head.  I keep picturing a cadillac with a dog in the backseat.  I keep picturing myself in your mother's house.  I keep picturing you holding your own hands over a toilet seat.  I keep picturing the nights I will have without you.  I keep picturing us screaming, our voices waking the neighbors like they always do. I don't like the wind.   I don't like the way it demands attention.  The wind always brings things.  Change, weather, tornadoes, ********  It's always brewing.  It's always there.  Even when it's lacking it's waiting for an opportunity.  I sleep with the fan on in the place I put it for you.  I wake up in the middle of the night freezing cold, but I don't dare change the setting.  I listened to that album you told me my love ruined.  I threw out the underwear with the holes in them.   Every time I get drunk I feel ridiculous. Every time I press my fingers to my lips I wonder if you miss them.  I wonder what you are thinking.  I picture us in separate houses.  When I am forty and you are forty one.  I am doing something.  You are doing something.  Maybe I have kids.  Maybe you're married. Maybe we still think about each other.
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Mar 2, 2015
Mar 2, 2015 at 2:56 AM UTC
Glass Half Empty
It was jaded submission.  It was competition.  It was the breath between hiding and fully addressing the existence of another human body.  This is where she lived.   This millisecond behind making eye contact with a stranger on a bus at 7:48 am speeding through a moping city with her backpack slung around her shoulder, filled to the brim with grapefruits because her 57 year old cancer-hoarding ******* of a father always refuses to sell the grocery store and thinks vitamin C is super important.  She watched tired bodies try to ignore the fact that they were born with legs and brains and hearts.  Motivated by waves of coffee and the kisses their significant others sleepily planted on their foreheads before reminding them to hunker down in their bus seat and get some reading done, she watched these people ignore the fact that a long time ago their parents decided to **** the brains out of each other.  Maybe if she sat there longer one of them would look up from the palms of their hands.  This was a morning like any other morning, a morning without feeling.  A morning without heavy. She didn’t actually care that much.  That was the trick; She just wanted to believe she did. People, like swarms of ants.  People like tornadoes.  People like an earthquake, running from one edge of the street to the edge of a different alley.  And nobody looked up.  Nobody knew where to put their hands.  This was the thing that got her;  Nobody ever knew what to do with their hands.  It was only when they ignored it, when they forgot the existence of their body that they actually knew how to touch the things in front of them, that they effortlessly existed like oxygen exists without color.  Maybe that was the point of life:  If you wanted to get through it you had to forget you were moving.
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Feb 10, 2015
Feb 10, 2015 at 5:45 PM UTC
Untitled
It was jaded submission.  It was competition.  It was the breath between hiding and fully addressing the existence of another human body.  This is where she lived.   This millisecond behind making eye contact with a stranger on a bus at 7:48 am speeding through a moping city with her backpack slung around her shoulder, filled to the brim with grapefruits because her 57 year old cancer-hoarding ******* of a father always refuses to sell the grocery store and thinks vitamin C is super important.  She watched tired bodies try to ignore the fact that they were born with legs and brains and hearts.  Motivated by waves of coffee and the kisses their significant others sleepily planted on their foreheads before reminding them to hunker down in their bus seat and get some reading done, she watched these people ignore the fact that a long time ago their parents decided to **** the brains out of each other.  Maybe if she sat there longer one of them would look up from the palms of their hands.  This was a morning like any other morning, a morning without feeling.  A morning without heavy. She didn’t actually care that much.  That was the trick; She just wanted to believe she did. People, like swarms of ants.  People like tornadoes.  People like an earthquake, running from one edge of the street to the edge of a different alley.  And nobody looked up.  Nobody knew where to put their hands.  This was the thing that got her;  Nobody ever knew what to do with their hands.  It was only when they ignored it, when they forgot the existence of their body that they actually knew how to touch the things in front of them, that they effortlessly existed like oxygen exists without color.  Maybe that was the point of life:  If you wanted to get through it you had to forget you were moving.
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2
I felt like a comedian waiting for a laugh in a room full of people with their mouths sewn shut.  I was forcing a feeling of weightlessness that denied it had a landing.  Our lives are composed in milliseconds of turning down chances and decision making. Our lives are played out in what we choose to keep avoiding.  We are the moments between waking and falling asleep, the moments between sitting cars and deciding to put the keys in the ignition. We are all love letters without postage stamps; only an inch away from the finish line with one ingredient missing.  Every day feels like a Sunday.  Every day feels like a traffic jam. And nobody wants to talk about it.  Nobody in the elevator.  Nobody on the street.  Nobody wants to breathe an inch of evidence that we've all learned the art of hiding anguish in a laugh track.
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Jan 20, 2015
Jan 20, 2015 at 6:29 PM UTC
Things I Would Tell God
You can't remember the last time you were all in a room together.
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Jan 4, 2015
Jan 4, 2015 at 12:16 AM UTC
I
I was uncertain of the time frame. At least that's what I tell myself. How many times do you roll over in your sleep to make what you know you've done wrong feel like less of an obstruction. This is the salt in water balloons. This is the bated goodbye.  This is the time of death announcement. This is home. This is abandonment. This is a ****** stump This is a phantom limb. This is a kiss. This is nothing. This is elsewhere. This is giving in. This is sinning. This is marriage. This is quantities. This is qualifiers. This is me, I am a body. I am words. I am impermanent. I am blood. I am water. I am carbon. I am sorry. I am apologies. I am motion. I am in love and it's as horrible as everybody promised. This is waiting. This is timing. This is counting. This is praying. This is driving. This is coughing. This is bleeding. This is losing. This is loving. This is painful. This is kicking. This is thrashing. This is sleeping. This is nyquil. This is ***** This is hurting. This is waiting. This is waiting. This is waiting. This is lonely. This is loneliness. This is swallowing. This is learning. This is ******* up.
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Jan 4, 2015
Jan 4, 2015 at 12:04 AM UTC
Untitled
So many writers compare love to a cancer but always forget to condone its ignorance, unaware that its blind multiplication is a specific torture to what a body has always called normal, unaware that it was put here only to destroy the one thing it will learn to call his other, it is only trying to keep you warm, it is an infant searching for better blood, it is doing good it is doing good, it is swarming closer and closer to your heart it is trying to make something inside of you laugh like you did the first day it realized your insides felt holy and it is only when it kills you does he realize he is alone.  This is why we visit graves.  This is why it is hard to understand why the goodbye felt like a twisted last breath in the palm of god’s hand. Why nobody left a phone number.
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Dec 22, 2014
Dec 22, 2014 at 12:53 PM UTC
Untitled
Dear Academia; I took the adderall because I thought you wanted me to be a machine.  I didn't understand that amphetamine tasted like candy once you got used to the way your jaw locked and your ears rang.  Dear academia, did you see my face when you read my GPA, did you see the way I stayed up too late after my after school activities trained me to live with anxieties?  Dear academia, why am I afraid of the mirror? Why did you teach me how to write a perfect paper but never prepared me for the look in his eye when he told me he didn't love me either.  Dear academia, i'm ****** off and you're swallowing me, does the sting of your impulses feel better when you know you're eating my hard earned money?   Dear academia, why do you give me empty promises?  Why should I spill my blood with this diploma, list my ethnicity and birthdate next to the insignificance of what you think makes me worthy, do these details feed your impending due dates or are you just getting off to the idea that only the educated few know how to think straight?  Dear academia, I tried my hardest to let you fool me, I can feel your ego fattening beside me as I watch your children scramble for their ideas of monetary gluttony.  You're increasing our wage gaps, do my late night tears fuel your addiction to epistemic poverty?  Dear academia, you taught me to think critically.   I am on fire with the matches you forgot you hatched within me.  Scorpions occasionally eat their parents and I hate to admit that this **** has me hungry.
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Nov 28, 2014
Nov 28, 2014 at 10:06 PM UTC
Manifesto of an Almost-College-Drop Out
Dear Academia; I took the adderall because I thought you wanted me to be a machine.  I didn't understand that amphetamine tasted like candy once you got used to the way your jaw locked and your ears rang.  Dear academia, did you see my face when you read my GPA, did you see the way I stayed up too late after my after school activities trained me to live with anxieties?  Dear academia, why am I afraid of the mirror? Why did you teach me how to write a perfect paper but never prepared me for the look in his eye when he told me he didn't love me either.  Dear academia, i'm ****** off and you're swallowing me, does the sting of your impulses feel better when you know you're eating my hard earned money?   Dear academia, why do you give me empty promises?  Why should I spill my blood with this diploma, list my ethnicity and birthdate next to the insignificance of what you think makes me worthy, do these details feed your impending due dates or are you just getting off to the idea that only the educated few know how to think straight?  Dear academia, I tried my hardest to let you fool me, I can feel your ego fattening beside me as I watch your children scramble for their ideas of monetary gluttony.  You're increasing our wage gaps, do my late night tears fuel your addiction to epistemic poverty?  Dear academia, you taught me to think critically.   I am on fire with the matches you forgot you hatched within me.  Scorpions occasionally eat their parents and I hate to admit that this **** has me hungry.
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63
You are not the cinder block of aggression that kept the bathtub from touching the floor.  You are the ears below the floor, you are crouching beneath the cottonwoods, slowly molding into the support system of a 1950’s kitchen that a man’s hands learned to bleed between.  You are his father’s sweat when he delivered him from his mother, you are the fists he used to pound his reasons, a woman’s tears seeping and melting in resin.  She lay barefoot before you, completely naked sliding her hands between her knees, wondering why the bare spot is so empty when there are bruises on her eyelids, on her face, in her mouth; Why there are no hand prints where there should be.  The prettiest parts of us become compromised with badges, badges we tell ourselves make up for the battlefield we were too young to witness, she wishes she would have learned ballet when she was young, when her hair still held shape. When she slit her leg and bled crimson you caught her. You watched the human race become disgusting with desire. You are composed of the same wood they used to keep a cradle lit. The wood of a casket, the same wood of a white cross in a room of crying soldiers who finally realized they served no benefit.
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Nov 19, 2014
Nov 19, 2014 at 3:00 PM UTC
From the Eyes of a Child
I felt a sickness in his kiss. He didn't know that I already knew. I wore red to his funeral when I was eighteen. We re-live the things that change us. II. Blink.   The living room is still a dull shade of alabaster. A beat up can of PBR sits crumpled in the corner like a forgotten love letter to God. The radio is still on.  It hums good charlotte’s wondering like a middle school yearbook hums omitted connections and promises of eternal companionship. People are passed out in couples. III. A dog barks somewhere.  I wonder if he’s starving, too. I touch cereal boxes, cheese plates, bread bowls and panic between the sheets of an unkempt and unfed twenty one year old. IV. I am twelve years old and i’m standing behind a podium having an anxiety attack in a tweed jacket and barbie light-up sneakers. Nobody knows what i'm saying. V. I ask the mirror if it's joking. The mirror laughs back at me. The mirror grows hands and masturbates to every other reflection its seen before mine. VI. It's noon and I'm accidentally cutting my hand open on the seam ripper he used to communicate.
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Oct 22, 2014
Oct 22, 2014 at 5:57 PM UTC
Bad Dream
grandmas blue pick-up truck her missing tooth and her maple syrup scented aprons with me in the back listening to LeeAnn Rhymes and snapping my 25 cent bubble gum to the rhythm of the radio, I remember tying my shoelaces backwards, thinking it was funny to trip over my own feet, watching my grandmother's hands fall apart as she chased me through the Cherry fields in Door County, Wisconsin.  When I came home to a flickering tv there was always an oppressive silence from the kitchen floor like I had just missed the third world war with my mother's wedding ring on the kitchen table, my father's work uniform neatly put away, my crayons on the bathroom floor like abused bullet shells, I tried to document the information but it had already been lived three months before, I had only missed the final showdown when two atom bombs refused to explode.
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Oct 17, 2014
Oct 17, 2014 at 7:46 PM UTC
Checkmate