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kyle-huckins
29/M/American I'm a web developer who likes to write poetry. Not much else to say really.
Some days I still open my eyes with silent panic that as I awaken, I'll be held down. At 8AM light streams past the gap above your curtains. Broken, I'm relearning safety. 7 years of surviving but now in your red sheets, I do not fear being held so much.
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Sep 8, 2019
Sep 8, 2019 at 11:28 PM UTC
Cinnamon Chai
I will forget the blue jacket you wore when our lips met, tongues curious behind closed mouths. I will forget the way my pinky slipped between your middle and ring fingers as you took my whole palm. I will forget just as the blossom holding witness will shed its petals. They will return, bound by the warmth of your ear kissing my neck while our hair tangles together. They will return, awakened by that passionate storm you pour as I uncork a bottle of neuroscience. They will return, just as the blossom that held witness grows its petals. They will wilt, soured as a year leaves the three months we shared behind. It was my mistake.
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Jul 20, 2019
Jul 20, 2019 at 10:09 PM UTC
Wilted Blossom
"In your dream, a moonlight figure appears at your bedside and touches your face. He asks if he might share the bread of your sorrow. You show him the table." - Ted Kooser, Lobocraspis griseifusa You want to hurl it at the grief- stricken you, squatting in mirrors, instead returning to the search for relief. In your dream, a moonlight figure appears. Its melody swirls in your tongue, echoes of the familiar, but no longer adjace- ent. In your dream, it clung to your bedside and touched your face. Hunting grounds exist everywhere for the prize you search for, but silence flails it's screaming head as you watch the passing of one thousand mayflies. I ask if I might share the bread. Shared stories birth laughter and tear as we nourish our torn worlds. What we want is stable, so I promise to contrast the flourish of your sorrow. You've shown me the table.
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May 5, 2018
May 5, 2018 at 4:26 PM UTC
A Chance Encounter
My hands open as our paths unfold apart, and behind us, cities unfold. Two Lycaenidae tear through the lavender field, whispering new ways for their wings to unfold. A book dances open, its words staring at the wide- eyed wonder of woman, watching its truths unfold. The breath of the ocean lingers, tasting of memories: ice cream, vinegar, and warmth, as waves unfold. Cookie dough, melting in the oven. The smell hits hard, and I wish for the taste, in my mouth, to unfold. Under plum blossoms, gardens of people cultivate understanding, allowing their chanting to unfold. A splash, as the boy is pushed down into water. He rises, bonded by water, to his God, his faith to unfold. Three pugs, home from patrolling the boulevard, resting on their owner's lap, puppy love unfolds. Our journeys have led to different roads. My soul opens as our fears unfold.
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Apr 4, 2018
Apr 4, 2018 at 9:09 PM UTC
Open
12 years ago today: The first time I massaged your scalp with my feet. For all those rubs, you paid me back well, friend. I'm sorry for the time I watered your hair with Kool-Aid, but it's my 1 to your 50. That's right, I've kept track, so don't even try to contend. I haven't forgotten your crimes: The time you stole my Silly Putty; bits of food you "found." Crouching whenever I awoke and let my foot descend. You always refused to give up your collection of clipped toenails, or clean the marks our dog left. And even then, when they wanted you out, it was you who I'd defend. But jamming the vacuum with loose ends, that was it. My willpower won't ever bend to you again. This month I'll rend you, not my common sense, old friend. Hardwood flooring doesn't bend.
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Feb 2, 2013
Feb 2, 2013 at 8:58 AM UTC
Firmer Ground
Lotus clouds oversee a Popsicle stick roadway, between us only dirt that, like jellyfish, echoed away A refugee of the Imperial Court once hid in the Zhongnan. He survived in silk rags, and would ode The Way Moss-haired men watch Magnavox in windows, the evangelical salesman begging them not to toad away. Across the street, near the top floor, a freshly-ex-student sits at his desk in an IRS building, told five hours ago to code away A face, topped with hot pink, brandishes her crop in a field of signs, screaming at Wall Street's old way. A yam of a man, braving his new home in the hills, freedom from obligation, finds a stream to wash the woad away. Along a country road, a man with a sandpaper'd face counts his money, having just sold whey Lotus clouds oversee a Popsicle stick roadway, between us only a past that, like jellyfish, echoed a way Twenty one years have given me many names. Call me Kyle, or the others I've borrowed away.
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Feb 2, 2013
Feb 2, 2013 at 8:56 AM UTC
Slipped Away
In this era of stressed props, I am sighing. Lists and signs and disagreements in which prawnbrokers have added rabid plantlife in addition to that already labeled in the corner of the shop. Often those additions are at the request of seers.
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Feb 2, 2013
Feb 2, 2013 at 8:55 AM UTC
In Addition to that Already in the OREF Form
I stand here silently, watching them take you away in a box of metal. Professional mourners weep like banshees in a bog. Strangers, family, and friends alike All stand, Allowing ourselves one final moment before you've been made into ash to let memory wash over us. You were the mad one. The only person I knew who could eat more than fifteen hot dogs in one sitting and still have room for lunch, dinner, and dessert. You always said that you would be the first to go, that death would take the best of us first. The men come out to to your family handing over your ashes. The weepers leave, the friends disperse, the family begins on their way home. Five years later, the anniversary of your death. I stand at your body-less marker. As I move to turn away I feel a hand on my shoulder. I turn around confused and gasp surprised. You're more than just ashes in an urn, hidden in a closet. You are the one who mourns, your death unaccepted by those closest to you. You ask me to say the words that no one else had the strength to. Good Luck. With that, you are again Ashes.
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Feb 7, 2010
Feb 7, 2010 at 7:39 PM UTC
Good Luck
All I can think to do at the table is stare at the bright orange Reeses' cups package and the Payday bars illuminated by light from the vending machine. I sit, wondering whether they drip inside their package. My arm drips to my pocket. I bring money to the table, ready to decide just what is it that I want to buy. I prefer Reeses', but it's been long since I've tasted the light caramel and crunchy peanut of a Payday. This decision would be easy if I had a Payday. As it stands, my money is dripping. If it's any indication of how light my wallet is, I can barely bring one back to the table. It's a tough decision. I've been craving Reeses' for weeks. I haven't decided, but this is it. I walk up to the machine. I'm done sitting, It's a question of this or that. Payday? Heads. I reach in my pocket. Tails, Reeses'. I manage the quarter out. How could I know I'd rip a dollar in the process? Back to the table for damage control. The tear was light enough not to be serious, just a slight rip. It's easier to flip a coin while you sit anyway. I toss it in the air and it lands on the table. Heads. I smiled, my decision was made. Payday. I walk back to the machine and drop coins in, not making eye contact with the Reeses'. As I get up, I feel terrible. I've betrayed the Reeses' cups I've enjoyed since I was a child, the delight that kept me going when there wasn't a drip of tea left. I think I'll go downstairs to sit and eat my new sugary master, the Payday. This time I pass by, not return to, the table. I look back, past the table, at the orange Reeses' packages, then glance at my Payday. It's light, I won't have to sit to eat it. Ashamed, my eyes drip.
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Feb 7, 2010
Feb 7, 2010 at 7:39 PM UTC
Sweet Tooth
All I can think to do at the table is stare at the bright orange Reeses' cups package and the Payday bars illuminated by light from the vending machine. I sit, wondering whether they drip inside their package. My arm drips to my pocket. I bring money to the table, ready to decide just what is it that I want to buy. I prefer Reeses', but it's been long since I've tasted the light caramel and crunchy peanut of a Payday. This decision would be easy if I had a Payday. As it stands, my money is dripping. If it's any indication of how light my wallet is, I can barely bring one back to the table. It's a tough decision. I've been craving Reeses' for weeks. I haven't decided, but this is it. I walk up to the machine. I'm done sitting, It's a question of this or that. Payday? Heads. I reach in my pocket. Tails, Reeses'. I manage the quarter out. How could I know I'd rip a dollar in the process? Back to the table for damage control. The tear was light enough not to be serious, just a slight rip. It's easier to flip a coin while you sit anyway. I toss it in the air and it lands on the table. Heads. I smiled, my decision was made. Payday. I walk back to the machine and drop coins in, not making eye contact with the Reeses'. As I get up, I feel terrible. I've betrayed the Reeses' cups I've enjoyed since I was a child, the delight that kept me going when there wasn't a drip of tea left. I think I'll go downstairs to sit and eat my new sugary master, the Payday. This time I pass by, not return to, the table. I look back, past the table, at the orange Reeses' packages, then glance at my Payday. It's light, I won't have to sit to eat it. Ashamed, my eyes drip.
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The thermos stands like a torpedo on its end. A gift from my grandparents, a reminder of family forgotten, gathers dust. It's still full of green tea. Unwashed and ignored, It's lost all it had to say. But maybe I should wash the stagnant thermos. Fresh, iced Oolong is best in the summer heat.
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Feb 7, 2010
Feb 7, 2010 at 7:38 PM UTC
Dull Torpedo