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laura-matthew
laura-matthew
American Hi, I'm Laura. I love music, books, writing, and pretending that I'm a photographer. I've been writing for awhile, but I've only been writing poetry for the past few years. I'm very open to feedback on everything I post.
The other night you reached up to the sky for me And pulled down a handful of stars To keep in my pocket You gave me the North star on a silver band To always show me the way home To remind me that home is wherever I’m with you You gave me the key your dead-bolted heart And I will carry it with me everywhere I go On a string around my neck Or in my pocket full of stars So as not to let it slip through the Sidewalk cracks of my hands. I used to see the stars from my window every night And send my thoughts across the reservoir to you Like the winds that blow water into waves Tears welling up over the spillway Pouring over onto cold cement Pounding like my beating heart A storm in a teacup A tempest inside this body of water Inside this body of mine And with each ebb and flow it swells Knowing so well this whirlwind of feeling Spinning tipsy through my soul A gentle hurricane, a familiar flooding Of safety and contentment and longing and warmth Rocking me to sleep when I can’t Curl up in your arms. They say that all the bodies of water on this earth are blue Because they reflects off the color of the sky So I went down to the reservoir With my pocket full of stars, The ones you picked out just for me, and Set them free, one by one, On the waters’ edge with Wishes tied to their backs in the hopes That they’d make their way To the night sky above our wondering heads In the hopes that they’ll shine beyond The milky light of the moon That creates a film across the darkness With the promise that I’ll carry your heart with me When we part ways for the night. These days when I lay down to sleep My ceiling’s full of holes from fallen stars That I’ve wished back into place But didn’t give enough time to grow Their roots back into the sky. I wake up with stardust in my sheets, Empty space where your body should be And the water from the tap just isn’t as blue As the reservoir’s on a clear day And the city lights stay on too long Keeping me from seeing the stars When I look out my window at night. But I still keep the key to your heart On a string around my neck, Resting just above my own beating vessel. And I still wear the North star on my ring finger To lead me home again. For now I am your latchkey kid Sitting on your front steps With the key to your heart slowly Growing warmer in my grasp Knuckles white from mid-October wind Rushing through my jacket. Here I sit Watching dusk stretch it’s hands across the sky Looking for the pocket full stars that I set free Waiting patiently for you to come back And show me the little tricks to Unlocking the door to your heart, The way you have to turn it just a hair to the right And push against the doorframe An un-exact science I haven’t mastered yet. I can picture you now, behind your counter Selling liquid stardust in pretty little bottles Packaged painkiller in a clever disguise I imbibe in the hopes that stars will fall At my feet to grant me one last wish. And at night when you return from the closing shift Smelling like hard work and strangers’ ***** Find me on your front steps, shaking in the cold You take my hand in yours, guide the key Watch it do its job, the hardest worker Letting me into your tired arms Where I can feel your beating heart Crash into mine like waves. We’ll sit here on your front steps for awhile Watching the stars slowly float away from each other In the reservoir of the sky.
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Nov 19, 2011
Nov 19, 2011 at 11:53 PM UTC
this is the wonder that is keeping the stars apart
The other night you reached up to the sky for me And pulled down a handful of stars To keep in my pocket You gave me the North star on a silver band To always show me the way home To remind me that home is wherever I’m with you You gave me the key your dead-bolted heart And I will carry it with me everywhere I go On a string around my neck Or in my pocket full of stars So as not to let it slip through the Sidewalk cracks of my hands. I used to see the stars from my window every night And send my thoughts across the reservoir to you Like the winds that blow water into waves Tears welling up over the spillway Pouring over onto cold cement Pounding like my beating heart A storm in a teacup A tempest inside this body of water Inside this body of mine And with each ebb and flow it swells Knowing so well this whirlwind of feeling Spinning tipsy through my soul A gentle hurricane, a familiar flooding Of safety and contentment and longing and warmth Rocking me to sleep when I can’t Curl up in your arms. They say that all the bodies of water on this earth are blue Because they reflects off the color of the sky So I went down to the reservoir With my pocket full of stars, The ones you picked out just for me, and Set them free, one by one, On the waters’ edge with Wishes tied to their backs in the hopes That they’d make their way To the night sky above our wondering heads In the hopes that they’ll shine beyond The milky light of the moon That creates a film across the darkness With the promise that I’ll carry your heart with me When we part ways for the night. These days when I lay down to sleep My ceiling’s full of holes from fallen stars That I’ve wished back into place But didn’t give enough time to grow Their roots back into the sky. I wake up with stardust in my sheets, Empty space where your body should be And the water from the tap just isn’t as blue As the reservoir’s on a clear day And the city lights stay on too long Keeping me from seeing the stars When I look out my window at night. But I still keep the key to your heart On a string around my neck, Resting just above my own beating vessel. And I still wear the North star on my ring finger To lead me home again. For now I am your latchkey kid Sitting on your front steps With the key to your heart slowly Growing warmer in my grasp Knuckles white from mid-October wind Rushing through my jacket. Here I sit Watching dusk stretch it’s hands across the sky Looking for the pocket full stars that I set free Waiting patiently for you to come back And show me the little tricks to Unlocking the door to your heart, The way you have to turn it just a hair to the right And push against the doorframe An un-exact science I haven’t mastered yet. I can picture you now, behind your counter Selling liquid stardust in pretty little bottles Packaged painkiller in a clever disguise I imbibe in the hopes that stars will fall At my feet to grant me one last wish. And at night when you return from the closing shift Smelling like hard work and strangers’ ***** Find me on your front steps, shaking in the cold You take my hand in yours, guide the key Watch it do its job, the hardest worker Letting me into your tired arms Where I can feel your beating heart Crash into mine like waves. We’ll sit here on your front steps for awhile Watching the stars slowly float away from each other In the reservoir of the sky.
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Gravity is not my friend. It forgets from time to time To do its job and keep my two feet Planted firmly on the ground. I can’t seem to get around Invisible stumbling blocks, Tripping over my own two feet, Knocking into things just by Walking in a straight line. Gravity is lazy, Wanting only to do the bare minimum. It makes my chest feel heavy when I lay down but if I close my eyes I feel my own untethered soul Float up into the ceiling And hide amongst the water pipes. Sometimes, I think gravity gets scared When I wish myself into something Scattered brain and disconnected Disassociation, depersonalization, Derealization—these side effects on the bottle They’re all taunting gravity And gravity runs to hide, Knocking me off balance and Up the stairs and skinning my knees And sometimes I don’t even know I’m bleeding But sometimes gravity fights back And my feet are stuck to the ground My limbs can’t seem to move, my Head feels like a hundred pounds My body aches until I lay down And sink into the carpet. Sometimes I wonder if you feel it too If gravity and you are on the odds as well With all your liquid confidence And substances to keep you happy And your tales of falling down stairs— You fall down, I fall up. We bob together in a sea of regret And change and past and Present and future and lust And hate but most of all love Nursing our wounds through Self medication until a very fed up gravity Pushes us down, down down down. Sometimes I think if gravity Were a little more benevolent We’d never have hit These bumps in the road. I could stay grounded, Feet planted firmly. You could stay buoyant Far above the surface. But no, Gravity is a very fickle beast. And as you’re leading me Back to my room For one last goodnight kiss I trip And float away.
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Nov 19, 2011
Nov 19, 2011 at 11:51 PM UTC
The one where I fall up the stairs.
Gravity is not my friend. It forgets from time to time To do its job and keep my two feet Planted firmly on the ground. I can’t seem to get around Invisible stumbling blocks, Tripping over my own two feet, Knocking into things just by Walking in a straight line. Gravity is lazy, Wanting only to do the bare minimum. It makes my chest feel heavy when I lay down but if I close my eyes I feel my own untethered soul Float up into the ceiling And hide amongst the water pipes. Sometimes, I think gravity gets scared When I wish myself into something Scattered brain and disconnected Disassociation, depersonalization, Derealization—these side effects on the bottle They’re all taunting gravity And gravity runs to hide, Knocking me off balance and Up the stairs and skinning my knees And sometimes I don’t even know I’m bleeding But sometimes gravity fights back And my feet are stuck to the ground My limbs can’t seem to move, my Head feels like a hundred pounds My body aches until I lay down And sink into the carpet. Sometimes I wonder if you feel it too If gravity and you are on the odds as well With all your liquid confidence And substances to keep you happy And your tales of falling down stairs— You fall down, I fall up. We bob together in a sea of regret And change and past and Present and future and lust And hate but most of all love Nursing our wounds through Self medication until a very fed up gravity Pushes us down, down down down. Sometimes I think if gravity Were a little more benevolent We’d never have hit These bumps in the road. I could stay grounded, Feet planted firmly. You could stay buoyant Far above the surface. But no, Gravity is a very fickle beast. And as you’re leading me Back to my room For one last goodnight kiss I trip And float away.
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60
Our lips are not for speaking truth beyond the barrage of empty words that flow from their parted caves. I’ve taken to holding open my ears because there is so little you can hear when you rely on deceptive soundwaves. The truth lies somewhere within the silence of two lovers on a king-sized bed in a rented room smelling faintly of *** and someone else’s faded dreams. It lies somewhere in the electric touch that travels on the closeness of skin as two hands quilt their fingers together. Two hands melt into one sharing a pulse that speaks volumes louder than anything the lips could ever try to spill out into the air. Listen not with your ears, but with your fingertips along the curves of her body, the open chords on your guitar, make her sing your name. Study her like the holy books you never bothered to pour over in search of authenticity, in search of meaning. And when you crash together harmonizing strings of pleasured profanity, gasps, sounds that almost form words It should feel the same as holding her hand. And even long after you finish return to your sides of the rented bed collapse near into sleep with a frenzied exhaustion don’t let go. Right between your fingertips lays the closest path you will ever have to hearing words of candor. The truth Lies between two lovers.
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Nov 19, 2011
Nov 19, 2011 at 11:49 PM UTC
Veritas
I. Last year’s winter left a blanket of snow So thick that all I see when I close my eyes Is pure white icing and the taste on my lips Is that of snowflakes dissolving on your tongue You came out of nowhere into my winter storm Crashed your truck head on into an innocent telephone pole It was lost, I think, and can’t be blamed for you Leaving your tire tracks in my slowly melting snowbank Of a heart—oh who am I kidding, it was Hot blacktop this whole time, perfect canvas for Swirling curves of your fountain pen tires, No *** holes, no frost heaves, just flat black tar. And magically you found a shade darker than dark With which to leave your pavement tattoo. II. I am a ghost in your house Haunting shadows, for some reason even In the light of day I still feel like I’m in the dark And the silence so thick it smothers the blaring Television and echoes so loudly I think my ears might Fall off should I decide to take one false step across Your floors and wake the dead. My funeral was forgotten. I died before my foot could even step above the Threshold, six inches from the mahogany porch That would still be standing should earthquakes Shake us in our boots and dig up our roots And your house could be razed to the ground but This porch would stay, Along with me, standing here, hand poised Afraid to knock. III. I met you somewhere in between the First hard frost of November and the first real Snow of the holiday season—either way there was A glaze of something cold across the whole city And I swear to you I’d never recognize the place Where you watched me flirt with disaster And I watched you live out the end of A chapter of your life in half-time. If you showed it to me in broad daylight It would be nothing but another quiet Empty room for my spirit to haunt with Linoleum floors and the faint smell of Jack Daniels’. You could pour me a glass but All I’d taste is snowflakes on my tongue.
0
Nov 19, 2011
Nov 19, 2011 at 9:58 PM UTC
Treble
I. Last year’s winter left a blanket of snow So thick that all I see when I close my eyes Is pure white icing and the taste on my lips Is that of snowflakes dissolving on your tongue You came out of nowhere into my winter storm Crashed your truck head on into an innocent telephone pole It was lost, I think, and can’t be blamed for you Leaving your tire tracks in my slowly melting snowbank Of a heart—oh who am I kidding, it was Hot blacktop this whole time, perfect canvas for Swirling curves of your fountain pen tires, No *** holes, no frost heaves, just flat black tar. And magically you found a shade darker than dark With which to leave your pavement tattoo. II. I am a ghost in your house Haunting shadows, for some reason even In the light of day I still feel like I’m in the dark And the silence so thick it smothers the blaring Television and echoes so loudly I think my ears might Fall off should I decide to take one false step across Your floors and wake the dead. My funeral was forgotten. I died before my foot could even step above the Threshold, six inches from the mahogany porch That would still be standing should earthquakes Shake us in our boots and dig up our roots And your house could be razed to the ground but This porch would stay, Along with me, standing here, hand poised Afraid to knock. III. I met you somewhere in between the First hard frost of November and the first real Snow of the holiday season—either way there was A glaze of something cold across the whole city And I swear to you I’d never recognize the place Where you watched me flirt with disaster And I watched you live out the end of A chapter of your life in half-time. If you showed it to me in broad daylight It would be nothing but another quiet Empty room for my spirit to haunt with Linoleum floors and the faint smell of Jack Daniels’. You could pour me a glass but All I’d taste is snowflakes on my tongue.
Continue reading...
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