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sarahcatherine
sarahcatherine
Hi, i'm sarah, and my therapist told me to keep writing / and thus i have. / 16.11.14
strong winds bring brash waters from the depths of the sea kissing passionately the feather-tips of the sand holding in its hand a galaxy amid the dirt. begging to the sky for rain yet feeling only the salty sting of evening's tongue by next sunrise the galaxy has numbed into a grainy dust to be beaten mercilessly by the lips of morning tide.
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Aug 2, 2015
Aug 2, 2015 at 9:31 PM UTC
regarding the sea
adrift in the sea alone water pressed flat wrung out, still wet all I want is a home love flowing warm in wrought walls new built of plaster and bone long stressed cracks roughly worn soft
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Aug 2, 2015
Aug 2, 2015 at 9:19 PM UTC
A home
The last time I saw God, I was face-first in a pillow rough like sand grating against cheeks swollen from trying to swallow back down a handful of pills hands that were too small to hold, too large to be wrapped in my jaw it was November. The first time this winter I saw snow, I was passing by a window that couldn’t open in a hospital, surrounded by spirits I didn’t know skeletons breathing, sharing air with locked medicine cabinets it was the brightest thing that touched my vision for three days and the metal mirror that night my face distorted I saw flakes of ice, scrubbed them off raw, they fell to the floor. The last time I went to church, it was my birthday freshly December cheeks stained rosy red from frost, face turning purple suffocating under heavy glances and empty sympathetic gestures; like a leaf off a tree in a room full of bushes, unsure of where to fall I left before the closing prayer. I don’t remember the coming of spring, but the waking up from a deep slumber, a plagued slumber was sudden, a jolt of lightning from the sky I have always loved storms. Blossoms on trees reminding me that my mind was rooted in new soil warmed under the sun, drooping petals reminding me that too much rain can drown the strongest flowers there were many rains this year. The last time I drank poison, I smashed the vial against the wall and spit it out through my teeth my doctor, she warned me that some substances would stunt my mental growth they were toxins, handed to me by familiar palms they were toxins, to be flushed down the drain and I was given water to calm the acid still scorching my throat strong, learning that it’s hard to get rid of skeletons in your closet when they have voices to scream back at you (it took me five months to bury the bones.) Six months ago, I saw myself at the bottom of a pill bottle I tried to swallow and although I’ve learned to lock up my medications sometimes I still wake up in the middle of the night, throat tingling, stomach throbbing, fighting off ghosts in the mirror who have since had funerals and been born again fighting off frost collecting in my gut, icicles melting to ash inside cheeks still swollen from when I tried to swallow snow.
0
Aug 2, 2015
Aug 2, 2015 at 9:10 PM UTC
beginnings and endings from the waiting room of a doctor's office
The last time I saw God, I was face-first in a pillow rough like sand grating against cheeks swollen from trying to swallow back down a handful of pills hands that were too small to hold, too large to be wrapped in my jaw it was November. The first time this winter I saw snow, I was passing by a window that couldn’t open in a hospital, surrounded by spirits I didn’t know skeletons breathing, sharing air with locked medicine cabinets it was the brightest thing that touched my vision for three days and the metal mirror that night my face distorted I saw flakes of ice, scrubbed them off raw, they fell to the floor. The last time I went to church, it was my birthday freshly December cheeks stained rosy red from frost, face turning purple suffocating under heavy glances and empty sympathetic gestures; like a leaf off a tree in a room full of bushes, unsure of where to fall I left before the closing prayer. I don’t remember the coming of spring, but the waking up from a deep slumber, a plagued slumber was sudden, a jolt of lightning from the sky I have always loved storms. Blossoms on trees reminding me that my mind was rooted in new soil warmed under the sun, drooping petals reminding me that too much rain can drown the strongest flowers there were many rains this year. The last time I drank poison, I smashed the vial against the wall and spit it out through my teeth my doctor, she warned me that some substances would stunt my mental growth they were toxins, handed to me by familiar palms they were toxins, to be flushed down the drain and I was given water to calm the acid still scorching my throat strong, learning that it’s hard to get rid of skeletons in your closet when they have voices to scream back at you (it took me five months to bury the bones.) Six months ago, I saw myself at the bottom of a pill bottle I tried to swallow and although I’ve learned to lock up my medications sometimes I still wake up in the middle of the night, throat tingling, stomach throbbing, fighting off ghosts in the mirror who have since had funerals and been born again fighting off frost collecting in my gut, icicles melting to ash inside cheeks still swollen from when I tried to swallow snow.
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