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sophia-1
everyone's always walking around with their own Big Sad (and we're so young) and everyone's Sad is bigger than everyone else's: she's got her Blood Sad and she's got her Sister Sad and he's got his Drunk Sad and they're all tangled up in their own so much they don't even have Sad Eyes for each other, anymore. i'm still tangled in you-- but just down by my ankles-- stepping on Sad, that little resilient ant hiding in the treads in my shoes to survive. that"s my own personal Sad, and he's not Big, just Powerful: i don't think i could lift even my own weight, anymore
0
Jan 28, 2013
Jan 28, 2013 at 8:55 PM UTC
big sad
i like you -r bed, she said. he smiled (she turned red). i like you -r lips, he said, you -r **** he laughed, you -r ass. they kissed. he sighed. she gasped.
0
Jan 28, 2013
Jan 28, 2013 at 8:27 PM UTC
sweet nothings
stimulant jitters again: another cigarette , why not coffee, why bother to eat if infinity exists i’m sure to get there quicker; if god is real i’m not going to meet him in my sleep. i promised you to not stop writing; now I can’t. this is the only high i’m used to, anymore. i have been introduced, finally, to the mirthless dementias of awakeness, and the men who strap them down, screaming, to stretchers, and to sleep, and they don’t wear white coats but axes, and the axis turns too quickly for biblical words to anymore impact us: the heels click, the sidewalk cracks minutely, the hungry daydreams die ----------------- [ i sleep. the heels click minutely ]
0
Jan 28, 2013
Jan 28, 2013 at 8:10 PM UTC
why not
let's put it to january, he says, by way of explaining some unfinished thoughts. and it has been a month of unchecked cold, of isolation, icicles, and heavy, broken bones. it's been hard to even lift a pen, let alone put it to paper. last year, we knew how to talk to each other. he wasn't sad yet and i was still defiant, and our shared glances were not furtive, but warm. we knew how not to talk to each other, sitting side by side and breathing in companionship and breathing out the cold. i knew how to be read to, and he knew how to read, his voice melting the passages down so i could drink them, digest them, and sleep. lately, though, we're afraid to be alone. somehow we are no longer breathing each other in but are breathing next to each other instead, hands in our pockets for fear of what they'd otherwise do. we are sufferers of curiosity but not quite longing, and the silence between us now is not intimate but tense and weighted, a measure of time and distance crossing axes at some invisible point. so we sit across a wobbling table from one another, helpless in the face of conversation. he politely shifts a chair for me and in the process spills my scotch. january, he says again, and shakes his head and looks down into his half-drunk dollar beer, avoiding my half-awake eyes.
0
Jan 28, 2013
Jan 28, 2013 at 7:50 PM UTC
some unfinished thoughts
if brecht thought los angeles was hell, he should have tried being a teacher in new york.
0
Oct 17, 2011
Oct 17, 2011 at 10:46 PM UTC
contemplating contemplating hell
friday comes in with the crickets, 
then the birds. the noise (not even 
songs) of both
 are sad. 

august this year is cool and damp, 
a tragedy, its own
 opposite. the trees are already beginning 
to die. sleep has begun to scare me
 again and so i wait it out,
 patiently, watching my ashtray fill and the light change clear, 
until it pushes into me,
 quiet and strong,
 unrelenting. 

when winter comes again,
 and snow,
 i can get used to sadness
 and to sleep.
 for now though the weather stubbornly 
ignores its season,
 stays stuck 
and stagnant
 and still.
0
Apr 25, 2011
Apr 25, 2011 at 7:56 PM UTC
friday comes in with the crickets
a tree did grow in Brooklyn. it was June-- our third-- and the summer weather hadn't turned yet: school was just out, Prospect Park was never full, and the nights were still cool. it was summer in the city before it comes unglued. i had yet to resent the F train terminal or its crowds or its sweat. i hadn't grown bored of 23rd St. on one end of the day and Church Avenue on another, or of the cost of cigarettes or coffee or of the FOODTOWN sign at the top of the subway steps. it was a beautiful month because it was doomed barely to last its 30 days. and there were too so many long hours, sitting barely shaded on your stoop, fending off the landlord's sister and the bugs and waiting for the fall. each time i've gone back since then i've sat on those slow steps; that summer it was no different: three months to crown three years, moving so timelessly by that next month the heat bore down, not the heat only of the sun and the air but the wet, ***** heat of the city, steam forever rising from underground, the oil spills in the gutters beginning to boil. but still it was New York and summer. the roaches and rats hadn't yet eaten all the fireflies. i grew to love routine disquiet: the long car rides to Queens, the Mets games and their pretzel smell and riding back, inevitably discouraged, my homemade tank top leaking Magic marker onto my chest; the trips to the beach at Rockaway, sullen and determined, and their return to Manhattan, tasting like salt (and you, once, like blood) and my hair stiff with brine and feeling the sand in our shoes grit against the ***** sidewalks; those quick walks from Smith&9th Streets, sipping Mexican Cokes and rationing our time by cigarettes: all of July was exhausting, but familiar by then. in August the tornado came, first Brooklyn'd seen in 30 years. we two slept blissfully through it, woke only for the aftermath. we went outside almost giddy, certainly unbelieving, holding hands. and the tree which had stood outside so serenly was uprooted, having missed the bedroom window by only a few feet. [it was June-- cool. barely shaded so timelessly beginning to boil all the fireflies.]
0
Nov 19, 2010
Nov 19, 2010 at 11:18 AM UTC
a tree did grow
a tree did grow in Brooklyn. it was June-- our third-- and the summer weather hadn't turned yet: school was just out, Prospect Park was never full, and the nights were still cool. it was summer in the city before it comes unglued. i had yet to resent the F train terminal or its crowds or its sweat. i hadn't grown bored of 23rd St. on one end of the day and Church Avenue on another, or of the cost of cigarettes or coffee or of the FOODTOWN sign at the top of the subway steps. it was a beautiful month because it was doomed barely to last its 30 days. and there were too so many long hours, sitting barely shaded on your stoop, fending off the landlord's sister and the bugs and waiting for the fall. each time i've gone back since then i've sat on those slow steps; that summer it was no different: three months to crown three years, moving so timelessly by that next month the heat bore down, not the heat only of the sun and the air but the wet, ***** heat of the city, steam forever rising from underground, the oil spills in the gutters beginning to boil. but still it was New York and summer. the roaches and rats hadn't yet eaten all the fireflies. i grew to love routine disquiet: the long car rides to Queens, the Mets games and their pretzel smell and riding back, inevitably discouraged, my homemade tank top leaking Magic marker onto my chest; the trips to the beach at Rockaway, sullen and determined, and their return to Manhattan, tasting like salt (and you, once, like blood) and my hair stiff with brine and feeling the sand in our shoes grit against the ***** sidewalks; those quick walks from Smith&9th Streets, sipping Mexican Cokes and rationing our time by cigarettes: all of July was exhausting, but familiar by then. in August the tornado came, first Brooklyn'd seen in 30 years. we two slept blissfully through it, woke only for the aftermath. we went outside almost giddy, certainly unbelieving, holding hands. and the tree which had stood outside so serenly was uprooted, having missed the bedroom window by only a few feet. [it was June-- cool. barely shaded so timelessly beginning to boil all the fireflies.]
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