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jashua
I could be an illusion to you, something so ethereal that people begin questioning what I really am. Maybe I’m just a voice, a bit of reason in the world or just a conscience with a body. I could be nothing at all, just a figment of imaginations, hopes, dreams, failures, hatred, and love. You question my nature as if you knew your own. You don’t, you can’t even begin to understand your purpose until you’ve suffered. Until the world around you collapses and is picked up piece by piece only for you to hear each piece plead to be reconnected. So it turns into a puzzle you don’t understand, a puzzle where some pieces just can’t fit with each other but you force them together anyways. Because if you don’t fix it who will? And yeah, your pain and suffering will lead you so deep within a darkness that’s unbearable, unbelievable, and cold. But that’s what you’ve got to do. Find the darkness so you will understand the light. I am a light, willing to guide you, you’ve just got to hold onto me and just trust me.
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Jul 3, 2018
Jul 3, 2018 at 12:16 AM UTC
Not Here, Everywhere
When the train cand through our little slice of the world, we’d laugh when we heard its whistle blow—long and loud, like nights in New Orleans—and how we’d weep if the conductor ever died. The stars would shine because they have little else to do on those cold nights. We’d huddle together near the fireplace and turn behind us to point at our shadows on the wall. You always made your shadows into such pretty things; I was too clumsy to make anything beautiful. And I wasn’t able to keep anything beautiful for very long, either. So when you left, I didn’t really need an explanation. Sometimes, if I listen close enough, I still hear you laugh when the train blows its whistle.
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Jun 7, 2018
Jun 7, 2018 at 12:13 AM UTC
Whistle in the Wind
Life is capable of grand versatility; there’s so many different ways to end it. Yet, so few ways to save or preserve it. I stumbled over weapons left on the field; the years have punished them for their deeds, for the lives they stole. Men who made these decisions: Gods, Emperors, Presidents, Generals; somehow few of them paid for it, but soldiers and civilians did. They paid for the bickering with their lives. How can men dictate who others **** Where did this bloodshed begin? Where will it end? Not on this battlefield, nor will it end on the one miles from here. Not even on the fields that’ve stood still for a millennia. When will it end?
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May 22, 2018
May 22, 2018 at 8:53 AM UTC
Walking Through Former Battlefields