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nico-reznick
nico-reznick
Clearing ivy, pulling up handfuls of choking bindweed, uncovering delicate wildflowers in neglected garden corners, and there’s this tiny bird lying in the dirt. Feathers sparkle pretty and golden, as fairytale light falls through parted vines. Surely dead, but then - like Snow White surfacing from magic apple-induced dormancy - the bird moves, woken by the kiss of sunlight and being witnessed, and seems to breathe. A gloved finger’s exploratory, leathery **** a moment to realise, then disgust, sharp recoil. A wing lifts; gleaming feathers parting reveal the crawling mechanics inside, the writhing, parasitic mess behind the sick illusion, the briefly faked miracle of something like life. Away over a fence, Union bunting ***** erratic and jarring in a neighbour’s garden. In a stuffy town hall, the town band is practising God Save The Queen, but still can’t keep time. Our betters wave to us from high palace balconies and golden coaches, and we cheer them for it. There’s such hunger, such pain and desperation out there, you can feel it, if you forget to stop yourself. There’s so much tragedy and injustice, you have to go numb or go crazy. There’s no future we can see, and the past has been rewritten to reflect the views of focus groups, fascists and fantasists. And there’s a bird lying in the dirt, garlanded by fragrant petals, feathers flashing like jewels, so dead it looks like it’s breathing.
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Jun 3, 2022
Jun 3, 2022 at 7:31 AM UTC
The Order Of Things
It's genetics,  and it's  environment. It's meningitis, glandular fever and the novel coronavirus. It's bad habits catching up  with me.  It's poison dust and GM foods and leaded petrol.  It's stress-induced. It's karmic irony. It's my sense of foreshortened future  made manifest. It's a new way of self-harming  on a cellular level.  It's punishment from a god I don't believe in. It's the universe replying it  doesn't care. It's dumb ******* luck. There's a million different  (equally plausible, equally irrelevant)  reasons. None of them change anything.
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Aug 1, 2021
Aug 1, 2021 at 5:50 AM UTC
But Mostly It's The Last One
To life, to love, to loss, to absent friends, to every emptiness we cannot fill: November’s started. Let’s hope this one ends. Everybody knows, yet each pretends that one can shape the world around one’s will. To life, to love, to loss, to absent friends, A wall imprisons all that it defends. I’ll watch you from my tower on the hill. November’s started. Let’s hope this one ends. We all know what the prophecy portends: a crow, a wedding ring, a poison pill. To life, to love, to loss, to absent friends. The breathing labours, and the heart descends; a final rattle before all is still. November’s started. Let’s hope this one ends. You must accept, though no one comprehends, the knowledge all great tragedies instil. To life, to love, to loss, to absent friends: November’s started. Let’s hope this one ends.
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Nov 2, 2020
Nov 2, 2020 at 1:09 PM UTC
November Villanelle
After their separation, she used to joke that they’d get back together when - and only when - one of them was on their deathbed.  Well, it wasn’t quite a prophecy, but it did land painfully close. Almost fifteen years since they’d last met, he caught a plane, got picked up from the airport by a stepson, long estranged, who brought him to the hospice. Seeing her there, in a terminal tangle of tubes pumping drugs into her veins and oxygen into her riddled lungs, he said: “But she looks exactly the same,” and if that isn’t code for, “Yes, I’m still in love with her,” then I don’t know what is. The next day, he bought her flowers, fretting over floral symbolism and how his bouquet could be interpreted. Their daughter advised, “Just pick something pretty,” so he chose pink roses, stargazer lilies.  Of course she loved them.  They were from him.   “Do you remember,” she asked him, as leaves fell from tall trees outside the window, “when we were the beautiful people?” The flowers outlived her, if you really want to talk about symbolism.
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Sep 16, 2020
Sep 16, 2020 at 2:03 PM UTC
Beautiful People
My brother came up to collect our mother’s ashes. At the same time, he dropped off her old vacuum cleaner. I don’t know why exactly. I hadn’t asked for it and didn’t need it; I guess it would have been a waste to just get rid of it. The thing is,  it hadn’t been emptied,  and for some reason that  broke me  all over again. That grimy little time capsule. That cyclone technology urn. Contents: Dust of a home you can never go back to; Fur of a cat now settled with a new owner; Dead cells of a dead woman. Remains.
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Jul 12, 2020
Jul 12, 2020 at 3:34 PM UTC
Ashes For Dust
Lately, it feels like there are a lot of ghosts that travel with me, everywhere I go.   Some of them walk on two legs, and some on four; some walk leant on sticks or frames, and some don’t walk at all, but roll slowly and inexplicably along in wheelchairs with no one pushing. Sometimes they follow behind me; sometimes they’re all around, thronged so thick and close that the pale, sad smoke of them starts to sort of obscure the living; sometimes, it seems, it’s me trailing along after them. And I don’t know what it is that we want from each other, and I don’t know if this arrangement is healthy or proper for any of us. But I love them,  so we keep on haunting one another.  I love them too much to ask them to leave me be.
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Jul 12, 2020
Jul 12, 2020 at 3:32 PM UTC
Haunted
It’s been three weeks, and I’ve ******* more about the agony of losing you than you ever did about the agony of actually dying. On a scale of one to ten, how much does it hurt? Guess you had the higher pain threshold, after all. Then again, you had better drugs, too.
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Dec 9, 2019
Dec 9, 2019 at 5:17 PM UTC
Ten
The roses you planted don't know that you're dead. Dumb vegetation can't comprehend the perversity of its outliving you, how its simple act of being when you are not is an affront to everything decent and sane and just. A senseless vitality of petals flash their idiot colours through a shroud of needling frost. It's not their fault. The flowers cannot understand that the one who gave them life has died. Whereas I pretend I do.
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Dec 7, 2019
Dec 7, 2019 at 11:52 AM UTC
The Roses You Planted
And so it turns out that what you thought was the moon is in fact just the lamp in an old lady's window, and the universe shrinks down to that one dim square, where some stranger is brewing tea, or thumbing a photograph album, or tidying imaginary mess, or getting ready to go to bed, alone. It's November, and it feels later than it is. You don't know the lady in the window with the lamp you mistook for the moon. Your orbits never bring you closer than this: each one in their respective window, their respective light burning low, and the street between seeming very dark. Yet some part of you dreads the moment when she turns out that lamp, and no part of you can explain why. It's November. And it's November forever.
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Dec 6, 2019
Dec 6, 2019 at 3:40 AM UTC
November Forever
Today, I am a cadaver-in-waiting. Cold, stiff and ashen, I am ready for autopsy and entropy.
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Jul 29, 2019
Jul 29, 2019 at 11:04 AM UTC
Wasting Time