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patricia-walsh
patricia-walsh
The crickets chirping outside my window Remind me that certain feelings Stain even the smallest details I told myself That things would feel different by this time (And they do) But in the same way a song is a time capsule And a mode of temporary time travel These crickets sound a lot like the ones that chirped away While I thought what I felt back then Would feel familiar forever Then again I guess they all do
0
Jul 28, 2014
Jul 28, 2014 at 10:57 PM UTC
Crickets
My dreary Sunday drive with A Fine Frenzy is interrupted by a text message: “Why do I wish he would text me? Maybe it’s the rain.” After reminding her that he is the biggest ******* in America, I hope to ignore my inner English major and continue overanalyzing the lyrics of “Dream in the Dark.” However, as the squeaky cadence of my windshield wipers crescendos, the weather practically demands my attention. She doesn’t need him and I don’t need you, but the rain never yields to assurance. It seeps through your imperfections and drenches every insecurity. Liquified doubt envelops the pavement, while the length of each red light seems just short of an eternity. I grow frustrated with the way the rain falls on my windshield, and having to rely on my wipers every three seconds for temporary clarity. I grow frustrated with how many three-second durations make up this car ride, and the way the squeaking mocks me, and how the rain doesn’t care about making it difficult to read the street signs.But the fact of the matter is I have somewhere to be, and I can’t let the rain prevent me from leaving where I’ve always been, even if only for the afternoon. Under a blue sky, it is clear that she doesn’t need him and I don’t need you. I just wish this weather didn’t make everything so difficult to see. So yeah, maybe it is the rain, but **** the rain on a day like this.
0
Apr 12, 2014
Apr 12, 2014 at 11:05 AM UTC
Maybe it's the Rain
You don't have to do that Spare me the Monday evening cordialities Have you even considered the fact That I am always looking away As you walk up the stairs? You don't have to do that Catch my attention with your smile Ask how I am doing As if my answer might sway your next move: A "see you later" in mid-stride How symbolic You don't have to do that Because I don't need any favors "I always acknowledge you" As though it is some sort of obligation And I should be thankful for your kindness You don't have to do that Because I do not care for Routine hellos and overused smiles Stained with the implication Of a shallow rapport You don't have to do that Better yet You have my permission to walk right past me Every Monday evening Because I am not interested In acquaintanceship You don't have to do that Because in the same way it is hard to unsee It is hard to unfeel And I don't know how much longer I can tell you I am "well" Without wishing or waiting to explode You don't have to do that Because your eyes Carry the prose I shared Written by of a part of me With which I am still unfamiliar You don't have to do that Because I am unable to pretend The reciprocity of our passions Is merely common And irrelevant You don't have to do that Because it is impossible to deny that We have chemistry We have chemistry But please You don't have to do that Because Believe me Had I known the sparks Would result in wildfire I would have extinguished them immediately I am working to put out the flames But it is awfully hard While you are fanning the embers
0
Apr 12, 2014
Apr 12, 2014 at 11:01 AM UTC
Just Don't
You don't have to do that Spare me the Monday evening cordialities Have you even considered the fact That I am always looking away As you walk up the stairs? You don't have to do that Catch my attention with your smile Ask how I am doing As if my answer might sway your next move: A "see you later" in mid-stride How symbolic You don't have to do that Because I don't need any favors "I always acknowledge you" As though it is some sort of obligation And I should be thankful for your kindness You don't have to do that Because I do not care for Routine hellos and overused smiles Stained with the implication Of a shallow rapport You don't have to do that Better yet You have my permission to walk right past me Every Monday evening Because I am not interested In acquaintanceship You don't have to do that Because in the same way it is hard to unsee It is hard to unfeel And I don't know how much longer I can tell you I am "well" Without wishing or waiting to explode You don't have to do that Because your eyes Carry the prose I shared Written by of a part of me With which I am still unfamiliar You don't have to do that Because I am unable to pretend The reciprocity of our passions Is merely common And irrelevant You don't have to do that Because it is impossible to deny that We have chemistry We have chemistry But please You don't have to do that Because Believe me Had I known the sparks Would result in wildfire I would have extinguished them immediately I am working to put out the flames But it is awfully hard While you are fanning the embers
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57
We sat across from each other in a dimly lit restaurant and I wished I hadn’t chose the seat with a clock in plain sight. I shredded a napkin between my fingers while fishing for words without bait. As he wiped condensation from his glass, I pushed the bits of paper into my hand and piled them in the corner of the table. During the time spent "perfecting" that pile, I pondered deeming the act a delicacy. As farfetched as that sounds, I couldn’t really help it. I dreaded the moment when our eyes would meet again, paired with our own versions of “let’s pretend this isn’t horrible” smiles. No teeth, of course. I wasn’t nervous about this evening or this man; in fact, my feelings about him were quite certain. He is decent looking, well-spoken, and kind. Despite my initial reaching for the doorknob, he insisted that I enter the restaurant first. Those who know me know I am adamant about holding the door for others, fueled equal parts by principle and politeness, but after a few seconds of lighthearted bargaining, I sensed that he just wasn’t getting that. I reluctantly surrendered with a mannerly grin as he swung the door open. I was not bothered by the fact that he didn’t get it, but more that it didn’t seem worth trying to convince him otherwise. After we were seated, he mentioned how cold October has been, and how “cool” the leaves look, and carefully spilled a few other cordialities on the table. I cleaned them mostly with agreement, but nothing more. He laughed when I told him I like to read the works of Jonathan Kozol “for fun,” and again when he saw the USA Today in my purse (realizing that I wasn’t kidding when I said I like to read that too). I wasn’t offended. Aside from being used to that sort of response, his laugh was not one of ridicule, but more a laugh of disbelief. A laugh that replaces silence while one reasons with the unfamiliar. Perhaps I would have been offended if he let me hold the door, or if he wanted to know why that mattered so much, but he didn’t, and from that I knew where this was going before it even started moving. I wasn’t nervous about this evening or this man, but rather, finding the man I wish he was during an evening of which I dream. I wondered how many more napkins I would tear and niceties I would exchange before meeting someone passionate and riveting and curious. Someone who thinks the autumn leaves are “breathtaking,” and laughs at my USA Today because he reads the New York Times. Someone who is just as obstinate about holding doors, but is never annoyed when I say "after you," because he knows I have a point to prove, too. I won't have to explain it, although he will ask me to anyway, just so we can bicker through our smiles at the dinner table. And when he tells me I am "too stubborn," it will be implied that he appreciates my stubbornness most of all. Someone who just appreciates me. I was nervous that man might never - “Hi guys, are you ready to order?”
0
Apr 12, 2014
Apr 12, 2014 at 10:58 AM UTC
On Holding the Door
We sat across from each other in a dimly lit restaurant and I wished I hadn’t chose the seat with a clock in plain sight. I shredded a napkin between my fingers while fishing for words without bait. As he wiped condensation from his glass, I pushed the bits of paper into my hand and piled them in the corner of the table. During the time spent "perfecting" that pile, I pondered deeming the act a delicacy. As farfetched as that sounds, I couldn’t really help it. I dreaded the moment when our eyes would meet again, paired with our own versions of “let’s pretend this isn’t horrible” smiles. No teeth, of course. I wasn’t nervous about this evening or this man; in fact, my feelings about him were quite certain. He is decent looking, well-spoken, and kind. Despite my initial reaching for the doorknob, he insisted that I enter the restaurant first. Those who know me know I am adamant about holding the door for others, fueled equal parts by principle and politeness, but after a few seconds of lighthearted bargaining, I sensed that he just wasn’t getting that. I reluctantly surrendered with a mannerly grin as he swung the door open. I was not bothered by the fact that he didn’t get it, but more that it didn’t seem worth trying to convince him otherwise. After we were seated, he mentioned how cold October has been, and how “cool” the leaves look, and carefully spilled a few other cordialities on the table. I cleaned them mostly with agreement, but nothing more. He laughed when I told him I like to read the works of Jonathan Kozol “for fun,” and again when he saw the USA Today in my purse (realizing that I wasn’t kidding when I said I like to read that too). I wasn’t offended. Aside from being used to that sort of response, his laugh was not one of ridicule, but more a laugh of disbelief. A laugh that replaces silence while one reasons with the unfamiliar. Perhaps I would have been offended if he let me hold the door, or if he wanted to know why that mattered so much, but he didn’t, and from that I knew where this was going before it even started moving. I wasn’t nervous about this evening or this man, but rather, finding the man I wish he was during an evening of which I dream. I wondered how many more napkins I would tear and niceties I would exchange before meeting someone passionate and riveting and curious. Someone who thinks the autumn leaves are “breathtaking,” and laughs at my USA Today because he reads the New York Times. Someone who is just as obstinate about holding doors, but is never annoyed when I say "after you," because he knows I have a point to prove, too. I won't have to explain it, although he will ask me to anyway, just so we can bicker through our smiles at the dinner table. And when he tells me I am "too stubborn," it will be implied that he appreciates my stubbornness most of all. Someone who just appreciates me. I was nervous that man might never - “Hi guys, are you ready to order?”
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5
while a symphony of cicadas sang narratives in summer darkness she wanted nothing more than to be like August as a kid she carefully colored within the lines, but often pressed too hard, and now finds herself hating the way her poetry nearly bleeds through the page but there are nights when August is stretched across the windowsill, demanding life from the quietest corners of her mind daring to ask what might have happened if the lines weren’t so thick and who exactly dictated their curvature but before she has the chance to part her lips, he is always pushed aside by a timely chill and replaced with the come-and-go of foliage and falling leaves re-enter the twisted comfort of September she closes her window the darkness is silent
0
Apr 12, 2014
Apr 12, 2014 at 10:48 AM UTC
August
It had been a year, and although I was merely trivial, he will always be quicksand I couldn’t help but notice the way that red flannel shirt hung so carelessly from his shoulders during our unexpected meeting at the coffee shop last week For a whole year I have resented the fact that he lingers in my dreams But has moved on to a beauty beyond my complexion The new girl with golden locks cascading beside eyes like watercolor pearls And me Hiding my inadequacies beneath Chiffon pink lip gloss and A 99 cent smile
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Apr 12, 2014
Apr 12, 2014 at 10:46 AM UTC
At the Coffee Shop
The moon is beautiful tonight And not a soul in this crowded parking lot seems to notice. His eyes on her, her eyes on tomorrow - Obscenely loud music trapped between tinted windows - Children tiptoeing along a tightrope crack in the pavement - And us. While walking towards your car, I consider mentioning that The moon is beautiful tonight - But what I see is meant for self-discovery or not at all. You look at me and smile. I will always admire the way her glow is so generous to Those unaware of the way she fills their eyes. A delicate modesty. You open my door And I am thankful But can’t help wishing to be with someone who notices that The moon is beautiful tonight.
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Apr 12, 2014
Apr 12, 2014 at 10:38 AM UTC
The Moon Tonight