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margot
I fell in love with a thespian and write poetry because of him. In return, he never fails to smile at me while on stage.
It’s two in the morning and I am wishing landlines were more literal. I could pull you across the distance that spans between us and the shocked silence wouldn’t need to stretch so far. You could have died. He could have died. But you’re still here and Damocles’s sword swings like a pendulum and that’s all that’s left to show for the fight. That, and the shattered glass across asphalt and the split second you couldn’t tell which grey was sky. Your knees are bruised, but they’ve been so before. Old wounds make way for new ones. Damocles is a myth. You are a legend.
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Jun 28, 2014
Jun 28, 2014 at 5:27 PM UTC
It's two in the morning
Can we just pretend that today doesn’t exist? I’d like to go back to yesterday where you recited Shakespeare and I kissed you every time you replace Juliet with my name. I do not want to think about how I have cried since then. I’d like to take us to a space where water flows up into the faucet, all the wrong words are unsaid, the door swings back open. I’d bolt that door shut, then. 143 locks up and down the frame. Then you’d never leave. We’d crawl into bed and morning would never end. I don’t think the inventor of cars ever loved a sad girl. Because if he did he would never have created something to steal life from beautiful boys. And the inventor of stairs probably never counted the steps one must take in grieving the loss of a loved one. Who left the 143 locks unlatched? Was it you or me?
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Jul 14, 2013
Jul 14, 2013 at 1:20 PM UTC
'I' and 'love' and 'you'
there's a boy in my bed who was not there before. i left for a short while and rushed back to find a rubber band boy stretched from my headboard to the foot of my bed. i'm afraid that he will snap or maybe i'm afraid i will because i've been wrought so tight my chest is collapsing in on itself but the sight of the boy in my bed, well, it loosens my strings. (and rubber always bounces back.) this rubber band boy has played me before; he knows all the melodies i will sing to him and he will croon back and it is the duet i have always wanted: the one where neither of us make a sound. i let the boy in my bed stretch his rubber band arms around me, rub up and down my back because i am wracked with sobs because i am panicked and broken because i am the scratched record i can only play the first few lines of the same song: '*wise men say only fools rush in*'; the rest of it flies over my head and hits rubber. so he finishes the song for me: 'i can't help falling in love with you.' i can't help but think that i would **** this boy senseless. (i'd **** him up too, i always **** it up). they call condoms 'rubbers' in North America but that's wrong. (they're latex.) they call erasers 'rubbers' in the UK. (correct.) Our culture gap reflects us well. I need, ache, to prevent mistakes from happening but I have ******* myself over too often; even latex cannot save me. He is there when the mistakes are made, over and over again, rubbing them out until they're nothing but shavings, little bits to be blown off the sheet, cut out from the final piece. i can only hope i prevent myself from becoming the mistake he must erase from himself. if i never get to be the opera, let me be a song, a verse, a single note. perhaps he won't remember me at all, just the bed he's stretched himself in. maybe what i'll be in his composed works is a well-placed rest.
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Jul 13, 2013
Jul 13, 2013 at 1:36 AM UTC
there's a boy in my bed
there's a boy in my bed who was not there before. i left for a short while and rushed back to find a rubber band boy stretched from my headboard to the foot of my bed. i'm afraid that he will snap or maybe i'm afraid i will because i've been wrought so tight my chest is collapsing in on itself but the sight of the boy in my bed, well, it loosens my strings. (and rubber always bounces back.) this rubber band boy has played me before; he knows all the melodies i will sing to him and he will croon back and it is the duet i have always wanted: the one where neither of us make a sound. i let the boy in my bed stretch his rubber band arms around me, rub up and down my back because i am wracked with sobs because i am panicked and broken because i am the scratched record i can only play the first few lines of the same song: '*wise men say only fools rush in*'; the rest of it flies over my head and hits rubber. so he finishes the song for me: 'i can't help falling in love with you.' i can't help but think that i would **** this boy senseless. (i'd **** him up too, i always **** it up). they call condoms 'rubbers' in North America but that's wrong. (they're latex.) they call erasers 'rubbers' in the UK. (correct.) Our culture gap reflects us well. I need, ache, to prevent mistakes from happening but I have ******* myself over too often; even latex cannot save me. He is there when the mistakes are made, over and over again, rubbing them out until they're nothing but shavings, little bits to be blown off the sheet, cut out from the final piece. i can only hope i prevent myself from becoming the mistake he must erase from himself. if i never get to be the opera, let me be a song, a verse, a single note. perhaps he won't remember me at all, just the bed he's stretched himself in. maybe what i'll be in his composed works is a well-placed rest.
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we may be the generation of the next shakespeares, curies, vernes, einsteins, akeleys, sagans. how can we be boiled down to a 'standard'? and when we refuse to stomach this diluted broth you have served us, it is force-fed: teargas for forks, riot shields for spoons, tasers for knives; until our tongues are so awfully burnt that all we may say is this: 'we are the standard generation. we are the future for the past. we have standard answers to extraordinary problems.' leaders say change will come in 2014, 2015, 2020, 2030, 2050, please ensure that the numbers on your booklets match those on your answer sheets. we will bubble 'a' for global warming, 'b' for the debt crisis, 'c' for war and famine, but this is a test we didn't study for.
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May 14, 2013
May 14, 2013 at 5:55 PM UTC
I hate standardized testing.
I think I like museums so much because they are just beautifully lit graveyards and I like to feel one with the dead.
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Apr 19, 2013
Apr 19, 2013 at 2:53 PM UTC
Museums
there is a time and place for everything there are times when i want to steal your breath from your lungs greedily, like a wolf, just so you’ll have to breathe through mine but there are places like the freckles of your cheeks, the palms of your hands, the flat expanse of your chest, that remind me of how beautiful it is to breathe through you as well
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Apr 19, 2013
Apr 19, 2013 at 2:43 PM UTC
For E
i love you like a book of poetry. specifically the one that sits upon my book of shakespeare’s works because your passion and mine will always kiss upon my bookshelf. i love you like the pages of that old dusty thing: 1935, it was printed. 2013, a girl cradles it’s words in the crevaces of her spine. i have loved you for 78 years. i love you like it’s cover, tough and tan, it has lived longer than our years combined. it has held together the whispers of love and loss of happiness or grief and it has yet to fail the story it holds within. i love you like a book of poetry because that book will never hurt you: you can cut it off right when it is at it’s best but it will always wait for you to come back, you can throw it across the room but it will still fall open at your touch and let you in, you can leave it on a shelf never to be read, but it’s verses will still be there when you decide to love, and i love you like a book of poetry.
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Apr 19, 2013
Apr 19, 2013 at 2:37 PM UTC
How I Love You