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lesspreciousmetals
lesspreciousmetals
19/F mia / 19 / lowercase trash / / http://lesspreciousmetals.tumblr.com / pfp from sir anthony van dyck
my obscurity was of a different vein than yours and while moonshine hasn’t lasted this long in ages I’ll still drink every drop until my body glows pulsating with every beat of my accidental heart hiding was easiest before you showed me all the colours you created before your dirigibles dribbled drowsily across my accidental skies you haven’t found me yet not one single atom our subatomic particles weren’t made for contact in a world too close to reality and while our breaths had yet to align i’ll keep breathing and every beat of my accidental heart will serve as the countdown to collision, the nuclear fusion to bring me out of this twilight and into the definitive if diminutive light of night fall
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Oct 7, 2015
Oct 7, 2015 at 11:26 PM UTC
accidental heart
pipe organs take deeper breaths than you. collect. i don’t weave you into forms you don’t know how to embody and you don’t breathe words into my lungs that my tongue cannot form. avarice. you think my arms not as they are but as you understand them, and you wish they were the same thing. begin. i’ll hold you into perdition, remission, partition, and there isn’t a soul on this earth who can do it the way i can. concede. there is more to you than the times you didn’t die. bygones beget brokenness, insects don’t lift a finger, and we don’t breathe the way you do. trust doesn’t allow for transgressions. resuscitate, alleviate. dreamscapes drift fitfully and i didn’t think of anything first, not even you. rewind. you’re impossible, but i always loved when my mother wrote fairytales.
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Sep 19, 2015
Sep 19, 2015 at 11:58 PM UTC
perdition
the rainstick is home-made from second grade when they tried to make us cultured and the paper towel tube it is constructed of is frayed at either mouth and peeling along the sides. the construction paper that closes it is fading started fading some time ago from all those days spent on your shelf and when you held it in your hands i remember the way you knuckles looked like little brass doorknobs all smooth and polished i remember your sand dune curves and how my fingers used to be the Sahara desert wind sliding along the grains and making small dips and dents in your pliable softness those same curves could stop wars and end world hunger i was sure of it and hardly a day went by when i neglected to tell you that you once gave me a journal that was leather bound with creamy pages whose grey lines begged to be set under a fountain pen and even though you knew that i only liked my work when i wrote about you, on the inside cover you scribbled: *for the days when i am no longer beside you— they will come. they will come* the only love song i have ever enjoyed is the sound of april showers whose droplets fall gently on the roof like the landings of a million experienced parachuters because it reminds me of the rain stick which you left on my bookshelf on your way out
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Sep 13, 2015
Sep 13, 2015 at 9:03 PM UTC
rain sounds in e minor
The coroner called to ask how I am but i told him I’m not You had two pillows in the house that you used, one in the bedroom and one in the living room and while I washed the other one three times to get your smell out, the other i have yet to touch because you’re coming home soon. The coroner called to ask how I am but I told him I was. The flowers didn’t bloom this year until midway through May and I remembered because you begged me to buy them and now they stretch their arms out on the window box outside my bedroom, respect for punctuality lost in a similar way that mine was. I cut them down before they could reach their full height and I gathered the clippings in a bag, burning them the way they burned you. The coroner called to ask how I am but I told him I’m trying to be. Your sister came over the other day and asked for your collection of playing cards because she said it was yours and hers, that she had found most of them for you on road trips and holidays. I remembered the way she looked at me the first time you introduced us and I shuffled a deck last night and could hear your voice counting as you dealt. I gave them to her anyway and thought I was signing a deal with the Devil. The coroner called to ask how I am and I told him I’m barely. Your shoes sit footless and your pants sit legless and I sit you-less and cross-legged in your closet all that day, trying to remember how to breathe. The coroner called to ask how I am and I told him I’m almost. The magnet on the fridge is crooked because the strip on the back fell apart when you ran into that towering block of tundra while chasing your niece and it fell to the floor with a sharp crack. I repaired it last Saturday and set it straight.
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Sep 3, 2015
Sep 3, 2015 at 11:40 PM UTC
the poster on the wall in my therapist's office says there's five stages of grief
The coroner called to ask how I am but i told him I’m not You had two pillows in the house that you used, one in the bedroom and one in the living room and while I washed the other one three times to get your smell out, the other i have yet to touch because you’re coming home soon. The coroner called to ask how I am but I told him I was. The flowers didn’t bloom this year until midway through May and I remembered because you begged me to buy them and now they stretch their arms out on the window box outside my bedroom, respect for punctuality lost in a similar way that mine was. I cut them down before they could reach their full height and I gathered the clippings in a bag, burning them the way they burned you. The coroner called to ask how I am but I told him I’m trying to be. Your sister came over the other day and asked for your collection of playing cards because she said it was yours and hers, that she had found most of them for you on road trips and holidays. I remembered the way she looked at me the first time you introduced us and I shuffled a deck last night and could hear your voice counting as you dealt. I gave them to her anyway and thought I was signing a deal with the Devil. The coroner called to ask how I am and I told him I’m barely. Your shoes sit footless and your pants sit legless and I sit you-less and cross-legged in your closet all that day, trying to remember how to breathe. The coroner called to ask how I am and I told him I’m almost. The magnet on the fridge is crooked because the strip on the back fell apart when you ran into that towering block of tundra while chasing your niece and it fell to the floor with a sharp crack. I repaired it last Saturday and set it straight.
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34
dreams like this aren’t a dime a dozen and maybe it’s just me but i have the sudden urge to rip out that piggie bank my mother gave to me when i was six years old and gut it with every knife in my silverware drawer or the hammer in her tool box, whichever i manage to find first. you taught me proper grammar and spelling and while i’m pretty good at one, i still forget i before e even though you spent a half an hour teaching the rhyme to me when we were in fifth grade and suddenly we’re getting spelling words like relief and believe and achieve and even though i had to look up their spelling on dictionary.com, five years later, at least i’ve experienced them all, at least i know all the blues of relief and the reds of achieve and every shade of yellow that colour in ‘belief’ like a stain glass window, and i’m glad i know what inversion and parallelism are because if i didn’t my poetry would sound like garbled half-english when read aloud. (as though it doesn’t already) i’ve found that spelling errors are slightly easier to rectify and god knows you gave me enough dictionaries as ******* christmas gifts. all ideas are repeated until we have left seven entities with their tentacles cut off but spices sprinkled on, ready for consumption, and i’ve learned that innovation and originality don’t come from new components, they come from the new arrangement of old components, so if i arranged the alphabet so u and i were together, maybe we’d have a fairy tale or maybe it would be a horror story or a crime thriller. i’d dream up the ending because that’s my specialty and you’ll read it like the loyal friend you are despite my many, many, many, many spelling errors.
0
Sep 2, 2015
Sep 2, 2015 at 11:29 PM UTC
run-on sentences are hard to catch
dreams like this aren’t a dime a dozen and maybe it’s just me but i have the sudden urge to rip out that piggie bank my mother gave to me when i was six years old and gut it with every knife in my silverware drawer or the hammer in her tool box, whichever i manage to find first. you taught me proper grammar and spelling and while i’m pretty good at one, i still forget i before e even though you spent a half an hour teaching the rhyme to me when we were in fifth grade and suddenly we’re getting spelling words like relief and believe and achieve and even though i had to look up their spelling on dictionary.com, five years later, at least i’ve experienced them all, at least i know all the blues of relief and the reds of achieve and every shade of yellow that colour in ‘belief’ like a stain glass window, and i’m glad i know what inversion and parallelism are because if i didn’t my poetry would sound like garbled half-english when read aloud. (as though it doesn’t already) i’ve found that spelling errors are slightly easier to rectify and god knows you gave me enough dictionaries as ******* christmas gifts. all ideas are repeated until we have left seven entities with their tentacles cut off but spices sprinkled on, ready for consumption, and i’ve learned that innovation and originality don’t come from new components, they come from the new arrangement of old components, so if i arranged the alphabet so u and i were together, maybe we’d have a fairy tale or maybe it would be a horror story or a crime thriller. i’d dream up the ending because that’s my specialty and you’ll read it like the loyal friend you are despite my many, many, many, many spelling errors.
Continue reading...
36
your fingertips are coated with stardust from the other day when you dipped into the midnight skyscape as though it were paint and I could smell it on you, the faerie-light, confectionary sugar scent of hazy dreams the color of moon-bathed water i clasped your hands gingerly because everyone knows that starstuff is sticky and steadfast and you told me that the oceans don’t follow the moon for the fun of it i don’t remember much of what came after because you had aligned your fingers so precisely against mine that I could feel the remnants of a thousand dying universes caught in the creases of my thumbs i soon learned that handsoap only applies to the earthly, just like water doesn’t even touch stains on the soul
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Aug 31, 2015
Aug 31, 2015 at 8:21 PM UTC
you're no astronomer, and neither am i
i. dusk doesn’t feel like an end to me. gladly, we play hide and seek amongst monuments made in retrospect, and the sun doesn’t make us go home until it’s already past dead. we drop hearts on the unsuspecting, play make-believe in the style of world war ii documentaries your grandfather watches on the history channel. winston churchill played with fire the way we play with matchsticks and death and dying make cameos fit for better actors. your rocking horse isn’t fast enough. nagasaki still stinks of radiation. ii. we breathe, virtueless, shoes untied and headaches no tylenol can hope to amend. there is money involved, as there usually is, and bills are exchanged from hand to soulless hand, stench of cannabis like perfume in the air. sobriety is elusive–you, effusive–we toast to ambiguity and *** between stoners and sinners. The ****** of yesteryear haunt street corners we use for battleground, though the fights take flight on rusted wings within the confines of our heads, vacancy signs flashing in our pupils. you reek immortal. iii. colourlessness is inevitable, but you always liked noir films. i play you on first base, set myself against flesh still pink with love bites from december chill, and your lips tell a better story than anything in black and white. we consume–we are all that’s left. we don’t speak english until sunrise and by then we’re telepathic. i don’t need words to say i love you. iv. we part, gasping for breath without sound in clothes that don’t yet fit us right, doggy paddling because they don’t actually teach you how to swim in high school PE. you’re a cartographer, your hands are maps, and i am left bereft, grasping at substance too thick for breath. i stop breathing, then, and you haven’t held my hand since.
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Aug 30, 2015
Aug 30, 2015 at 7:14 PM UTC
immortal
i. dusk doesn’t feel like an end to me. gladly, we play hide and seek amongst monuments made in retrospect, and the sun doesn’t make us go home until it’s already past dead. we drop hearts on the unsuspecting, play make-believe in the style of world war ii documentaries your grandfather watches on the history channel. winston churchill played with fire the way we play with matchsticks and death and dying make cameos fit for better actors. your rocking horse isn’t fast enough. nagasaki still stinks of radiation. ii. we breathe, virtueless, shoes untied and headaches no tylenol can hope to amend. there is money involved, as there usually is, and bills are exchanged from hand to soulless hand, stench of cannabis like perfume in the air. sobriety is elusive–you, effusive–we toast to ambiguity and *** between stoners and sinners. The ****** of yesteryear haunt street corners we use for battleground, though the fights take flight on rusted wings within the confines of our heads, vacancy signs flashing in our pupils. you reek immortal. iii. colourlessness is inevitable, but you always liked noir films. i play you on first base, set myself against flesh still pink with love bites from december chill, and your lips tell a better story than anything in black and white. we consume–we are all that’s left. we don’t speak english until sunrise and by then we’re telepathic. i don’t need words to say i love you. iv. we part, gasping for breath without sound in clothes that don’t yet fit us right, doggy paddling because they don’t actually teach you how to swim in high school PE. you’re a cartographer, your hands are maps, and i am left bereft, grasping at substance too thick for breath. i stop breathing, then, and you haven’t held my hand since.
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42
iridescence was never my forte but baby, when i’m with you, i feel like i can be any colour in the rainbow
0
Aug 29, 2015
Aug 29, 2015 at 12:01 AM UTC
Untitled
Endlessly, relentlessly, you make haste by unbroken parable, cry incense incensed, censure me, call names of the unjust, we’re unjust, there’s unbroken like fish and bread in multitudes, swing low and wide on fingertips that have never known bare skin the way I have known yours, chariots lost on pharoah’s feet and dying prodigals covering little ground. Calling him, you came like waves on shore parting for boat hulls, licking up starboard side thirsty for purpose, raising church in three days making metaphor into matter, I met you halfway, holding staff still dripping crimson on toes that hadn’t yet touched the sea. We made miracles. I’ve yet to find contentment among tents pitched forty days ago, dusted in sugar burning tongues too used to manna, leaning ‘against winds that whisper designs o'er mount Sinai, whisper Pontius Pilate condemnation, whisper platitudes Peter proclaimed before **** crowed thrice. Crucify us. We don’t dare step down. Raise us. We’ve yet to sin.
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Aug 28, 2015
Aug 28, 2015 at 11:27 PM UTC
prodigal sons