Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
reed_books
24/Non-binary/Boston
Too ****** up to ever get ****** up.
0
Jun 12, 2022
Jun 12, 2022 at 12:19 PM UTC
Sober
Even the sun will die, my dear. Burning as it’s ending, ending as it’s giving, giving as it’s shining, shining as it's burning, and burning as it’s ending. Before the world goes black, I want you to die like the sun. Be beautiful and broken and bright. All to suspend the darkness, even just for a moment longer. Darling, I want you to die like the sun.
0
Jun 7, 2022
Jun 7, 2022 at 12:46 AM UTC
Darling, I want you to die like the sun
She is a sunflower - a fully alive homeland. Grown to bloom into the dust, she follows the sun. Each stroke reminding me how it feels to be alive. And that is hard to find.
0
May 11, 2022
May 11, 2022 at 8:43 PM UTC
She is a sunflower
Tick Can you hear the time? As her pencil – tap, tap, taps – on the desk, history drones on in the background. She wishes for time to wisp itself away, as her eyes chase the clock around the bend. Tock It passes by. The clacking and clambering of high heels on pavement announce the haste in her heart. Five more minutes – just five more minutes – until her life tumbles before it begins. Time drips down her spine; it sends a shiver back up it. Coffee drips down her arm. Tick It never stops. His time is measured in meters and dashes. He runs circles to get to the end. While he races the runners, he races the time, trying to beat counting at its own game. Tock Why won’t it stop? A mother jolts awake to the sound of wails. “2:38am.” Dragging her body out of a cloud, she wishes for time to sleep through the night. She wishes for time long gone. Tick What if it stops? The power goes out in a storm overnight, and the clocks begin to flash. A father meanders through the house that night to mend each blinking beacon before his kids awaken, suspended in time. Tock Please don’t stop. With these people concerned about time, you probably glanced down at your watch. Do you have enough time to make it to the next meaningless task? Tick How much is left? How do you feel about killing time? We’re going to die, and we’re running out of time. Yet, as time murders you, you ****** time. Tock What time is it? The world goes on, and it will happen again. Tick Once at the beginning. As her pencil – tap, tap, taps – on the desk, history drones on in the background. She wishes for time to wisp itself away, as her eyes race the clock around the bend. Tock Can you hear the end?
0
May 9, 2022
May 9, 2022 at 12:30 AM UTC
Tick, Tock
Tick Can you hear the time? As her pencil – tap, tap, taps – on the desk, history drones on in the background. She wishes for time to wisp itself away, as her eyes chase the clock around the bend. Tock It passes by. The clacking and clambering of high heels on pavement announce the haste in her heart. Five more minutes – just five more minutes – until her life tumbles before it begins. Time drips down her spine; it sends a shiver back up it. Coffee drips down her arm. Tick It never stops. His time is measured in meters and dashes. He runs circles to get to the end. While he races the runners, he races the time, trying to beat counting at its own game. Tock Why won’t it stop? A mother jolts awake to the sound of wails. “2:38am.” Dragging her body out of a cloud, she wishes for time to sleep through the night. She wishes for time long gone. Tick What if it stops? The power goes out in a storm overnight, and the clocks begin to flash. A father meanders through the house that night to mend each blinking beacon before his kids awaken, suspended in time. Tock Please don’t stop. With these people concerned about time, you probably glanced down at your watch. Do you have enough time to make it to the next meaningless task? Tick How much is left? How do you feel about killing time? We’re going to die, and we’re running out of time. Yet, as time murders you, you ****** time. Tock What time is it? The world goes on, and it will happen again. Tick Once at the beginning. As her pencil – tap, tap, taps – on the desk, history drones on in the background. She wishes for time to wisp itself away, as her eyes race the clock around the bend. Tock Can you hear the end?
Continue reading...
56
When the sirens come on, don’t remain above ground. Your dad will probably stay and watch. He keeps the front door wide open. He invites those gathering winds for a nightcap. You must befriend the lonely creaks as you descend. (If you don’t have a basement, just get as low as you can. Lie down in a ditch. Crawl into something concrete. Hit rock bottom. Drop to the floor. Anything is better than a grave.) You’ll want to turn on the TV, or a radio, or your intuition. If it gets too bad, or if dad never comes down, or if the wind decides to stay for dessert, curl up just as you did when you wandered into this world on your hands and knees, with the back of your heels on your **** forehead to the ground, and cover your head with your hands. Almost like you’re praying.
0
May 9, 2022
May 9, 2022 at 12:21 AM UTC
Tornado Warning
Under its frigid, dusty surface, Mars is humming. Alien music. The Martian song that never ends. The first few months of listening were worryingly quiet. A harrowing descent to a flat, featureless expanse. It’s a waiting game, a slow march. Streams of charged particles, turbulence in solar winds, a sudden release, and the marsquakes roll in. A series of deep slashes, pockets of magma, the movement of molten rock, a seismic signal, the mysterious pulse, the quiet, constant drone, the source remains unknown. The invisible conductor of this magnetic orchestra is likely high above those Martian rumbles. Your voice is a mix of frequencies, and if one matches the resonance of a bell, your shouts can set it ringing.
0
May 9, 2022
May 9, 2022 at 12:19 AM UTC
Mars is Humming (A Found Poem from Maya Wei-Haas’Article, “Mars is humming. Scientists aren’t sure why.” published in National Geographic on February 24, 2020)
Novel coronavirus. Travelers in motion. Spewing the virus. One fervent hope in danger of being dashed. Undocumented carriers. 86% of all infections. These people are the major drivers. The ones who facilitated the spread. Unseen transmission. Unseen spread. Much harder to stomp. The longer the period of silent viral shedding, the more difficult it is to control the outbreak. Containment is nearly not possible.
0
May 9, 2022
May 9, 2022 at 12:18 AM UTC
Undocumented Carriers (A Found Poem from Melissa Healy’s Article, “How ‘silent spreaders’ are fueling the coronavirus pandemic” published in the Los Angeles Times on March 17, 2020)
The crusts of wheat bread will turn my hair curly. I believe this because of Papa Don. It’s because of him that I believe in the power of Tex-Mex and the magic of the Texas Rangers. He loved both the same, and all nine children even more. He never forgot the name – or the First Communion – of every one of his twenty-three grandchildren. He loved me from afar, but every reunion made me feel his love like it was always up close. He won’t be at my graduation. Degenerative heart failure stole his life before all the Diet Cokes could. His heart, his heroic heart. This past Christmas, he fell dreamlessly onto the floor.
0
May 9, 2022
May 9, 2022 at 12:16 AM UTC
Papa Don
Ducks have secret blue feathers beneath their wings. They’re called speculum feathers. I like to call them mirror wings or looking feathers. Birds use them to find their flock. To find other birds like them. To fall in love. This morning, I sat alone on a dock, and I watched two swimming ducks who were showing their speculum feathers. Were they lost? Were they making love? Maybe the answer is both. Or neither. They ruffled their wings in unison, and they circled the pond like they were dancing. Their light bounced and reflected onto my shadow. I tried to feed them half-grapes, but they were too happy to let me be happy with them
0
May 9, 2022
May 9, 2022 at 12:15 AM UTC
Speculum Feathers
Okoboji’s wave-crashing lullaby baptized me whole. Her voice sounds just like my grandmother’s missing morning-hum. It echoes like a ripple, and it rings in far-off frequencies. I run off the dock – one hundred and thirty-six feet deep. She will catch me. She has let me fall. Born from a blue-water lake, I collected Her drops in my eyes. She wanted me to be my own reservoir.
0
May 9, 2022
May 9, 2022 at 12:13 AM UTC
Resting Water