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lifelover
lifelover
24/F language as residue / memory as a wound that learned to speak
it remembers me. the sky. the mouth above the mouth. the lightless gullet where clouds go to rot. i kneel in the driveway and my bones click like prayer beads. i say nothing. the wind fills in the blanks. above, the bruised vault peels open. something pours out that smells like me— ozone and old milk and motherlessness. i know this feeling. the ache behind the eye. the tug in the marrow. the static in the throat right before god speaks and forgets my name again. the sky remembers me. like blood remembers stain. like salt remembers wound. like hunger remembers teeth. and so i let it. i open my mouth and taste iron, and ascend. not float. not rise. just— dislocate upward until every tendon sings its own name and snaps like wet string. there is no rupture. there is no goodbye. only the soft gulp of return
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Apr 17, 2025
Apr 17, 2025 at 3:43 AM UTC
mouth above the mouth
every time i open my mouth to speak my tongue tangles up in the branches and bitter blooms. long limbs knotted up in christ and the front yard of my childhood carry green suns instead of rib cages. i have called you a ruin! i have called you the home i was torn from! now that i can only speak in flowers, can you hear me? the orchid bears my naïveté the rose my wounds, the dying nettle my tenderness. what if i am small forever? will salvation reach for me? he sits there, on the willow with the broken branches. and my mother, she asked him this one sunless sunday: how can i help her find the light? but i have already done it all. i have torn out all my past lives from under rotting floorboards and i have cut off all my fingers (i cut off all my fingers just to touch you!) no, mother. the question is how can i help the light find her? salvation spits on my grave.
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Oct 29, 2019
Oct 29, 2019 at 8:31 PM UTC
contagion
every evening i slaughter the sun. every evening i cut her up on unforgiving mountain peaks i dip her blood orange blistered flesh in saltwater; i do this for the moon. the sun gurgles as she drowns
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Sep 17, 2019
Sep 17, 2019 at 4:43 PM UTC
gloam
when all the birds have broken their wings i will cradle your blood in my palms like holy water. it’s warm, warmer than god’s voice ever was. time does not speak to me. it only gnaws. i lie beneath the floorboards, fingernails black with rot, scraping remnants of lace and dried sweetness from the soft decay of forgotten girlhood. those torn seams, those salt-laced dreams— what is purity but a ghost in the mildew? O hearken! the lilies are shrieking again. their tongues curl like burnt scripture. and i— forever entranced by the acacia with the broken branches— watch it weep sap like blood from an open wound, as if to mourn something only the trees remember. i have swallowed the nightingales, pressed their hollowed bodies to the roof of my mouth and vowed to keep them safe. put your hands within me and you will know the breaking of their wings— each bone snapping in rhythm with the pulse beneath my skin. Our God sees everything but he blinks often. how could anyone have a mother? your ribcage—once cathedral, now ruin— shatters under the thousand-eyed weight of dead saviors. their halos clang as they fall. your conscience flickers like static, blotted out by the black geometry of the insatiable void. cassiopeia screams into her chains but the stars do not loosen. the universe unfurls like a paper body set alight. O hearken! kneel for the Great Reprieve! when all the birds have broken their wings— may we bleed beautifully. oh mercy you, oh mercy me.
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Sep 4, 2019
Sep 4, 2019 at 11:02 PM UTC
the great reprieve
when all the birds have broken their wings i will cradle your blood in my palms like holy water. it’s warm, warmer than god’s voice ever was. time does not speak to me. it only gnaws. i lie beneath the floorboards, fingernails black with rot, scraping remnants of lace and dried sweetness from the soft decay of forgotten girlhood. those torn seams, those salt-laced dreams— what is purity but a ghost in the mildew? O hearken! the lilies are shrieking again. their tongues curl like burnt scripture. and i— forever entranced by the acacia with the broken branches— watch it weep sap like blood from an open wound, as if to mourn something only the trees remember. i have swallowed the nightingales, pressed their hollowed bodies to the roof of my mouth and vowed to keep them safe. put your hands within me and you will know the breaking of their wings— each bone snapping in rhythm with the pulse beneath my skin. Our God sees everything but he blinks often. how could anyone have a mother? your ribcage—once cathedral, now ruin— shatters under the thousand-eyed weight of dead saviors. their halos clang as they fall. your conscience flickers like static, blotted out by the black geometry of the insatiable void. cassiopeia screams into her chains but the stars do not loosen. the universe unfurls like a paper body set alight. O hearken! kneel for the Great Reprieve! when all the birds have broken their wings— may we bleed beautifully. oh mercy you, oh mercy me.
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47
i lie facedown on the train tracks. the gravel presses symbols into my skin, but none of them translate. home is a concept with too many rooms. i sharpened my alibi on my mother’s brittle bones until it fit into a quieter mouth. she didn't flinch. the sun unthreads me one fiber at a time. nothing resists. blink blink blink each time, the world returns slightly rearranged— trees on the ceiling, windows in my stomach. i found a way out, but it only leads back here. the platform loops in the shape of an open jaw. i circled it three times, then laid down between its metal teeth— the world doesn’t bite anymore. it just holds me. small, warm, still breathing. regret nests in the hinge of my jaw. i keep it clenched, and it doesn’t protest. it flicks the lights off when the rail begins to sing. it knows the schedule better than i do. the daylight plucks at my ribs like harp strings. each note sounds like a name i was never meant to hold. i buried the moon weeks ago. she made it difficult to leave. if you’re still listening— the train is already halfway through me. today, i let the mouth stay open. maybe the scream will crawl back in. maybe it never left.
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Mar 1, 2018
Mar 1, 2018 at 11:42 PM UTC
quiet passenger
were i to eat the sun and let its pulp trickle down my throat— would i glow through the skin like gods do in their upstairs rooms? would they pull a chair for me? would they look me in the face or through it? what is it, to have no one above but still feel pressed from the top down? the halls breathe. the windows widen. my mind reached the edge of space and left static in the vents. it drips from the ceiling in the shape of warnings. i drift through the folds of my boxmind— no doors, no exits, just pill bottles echoing in reverse. the corners hum in borrowed voices. my tongue collapses like paper soaked in antiseptic. it’s always like this when the antipsychotics dissolve before i do: time frays, gravity peels, and i wake up inside-out.
0
Dec 13, 2016
Dec 13, 2016 at 12:36 AM UTC
a study in duality
when i was ten my sister tried to drown me because she wanted to cleanse me of my sins. they said she was schizophrenic but i think she was right
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Nov 25, 2016
Nov 25, 2016 at 10:23 AM UTC
living proof
when the moon blinked, he saw me, angry but not mad. i have stars under my tongue.  i won’t swallow and my bones scream to be let out from under my skin— they are the fire on the surface
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Sep 25, 2016
Sep 25, 2016 at 3:14 PM UTC
do not disturb