Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
sophie-herzing
sophie-herzing
German Move with me. / / Welcome to my confessions.
For me, you are Sunday. Today is Sunday, and tomorrow will be Sunday. Because I am stuck in gingham yellow sheets, small white saucers with matching ceramic cups, cigarette ashes like a crop circle around them as I sip homemade coffee. The ***** brown liquid sloshing in the back of my throat, scorching my insides as I swallow something not nearly as painful as looking up for an answer to the crossword and realizing you are not in fact actually there, and your hand is not on my thigh, tracing the outline of my knee with your thumb. I am stuck like a kid on the monkey bars. Deciphering between reaching my hand out to grab the next rung or just allowing myself to fall into the wood chips, welcome that scraped skin and soil in the worry lines of my palms. Because calling you, reaching out to that line, could end with me face up on my bed staring at the blades of my fan trying to pinpoint just one to follow around and around again. Or I could get your voicemail. Or you could see my number and decide to hang up. How close were we really anyway? Or you could answer and we could talk through how bad the weather is, how we've been doing, and then get to the poignant silence, that hum in the background that coils through the wires into my ear, down the canal, and sinks into my heart until the pressure becomes too much. Until I tell you that its Sunday. That I need the 1994 Tony Award winning musical for 3 across, and hopefully, you'll give me the right answer.
0
Jan 27, 2016
Jan 27, 2016 at 11:55 AM UTC
Sunday Morning
We used to sit in your parent's basement with your two dogs on their little beds in the corner by the old desktop computer, wooden hand-me-down grandmother cabinetry, lace doilies underneath all the candles on the coffee table. I made you turn out the lights. We would sit there and pretend that we could find something better to do than kiss between commercials or talk about all the things we used to dream about in high school, how I got mine and how yours were like the back bumper of a car that got left out in the rain too long-- a little rusty. Your kissing was a little rusty, but I let it go because you didn't make fun of me ordering a double grilled cheese on our first date. You also didn't judge when I got drips on my dress from my ice cream cone. I can still remember the way you'd yell at me for stopping too far out at intersections, laughing how I was gonna get us killed one day, but I think you just really loved to hear me sing over you. I think you really loved me, and here I was playing teeter totter on curbs in little jean shorts with a guy who gave me a slice of leftover pizza. Here I was, burning down your own ambitions because they didn't seem as glittery as my own, because you didn't quite match all the sketches, all the plans I had on my map. Because if we were to draw straws I always thought you would come up a little short. I think you really loved me and I left you like a penny in between that couch we used to sit on.
0
Jan 11, 2016
Jan 11, 2016 at 11:04 AM UTC
The Things I Shouldn't Have Done
You asked if I was going to stay, I nodded, but I'm just waiting here until your coffee cools, until your feet go numb from sitting on them so you have to switch positions, until the letters magnetized to your fridge stop twisting themselves into "sorry." Until I feel better about not calling you later. Last night you asked if I liked Bon Iver, I nodded, but I only did that in hopes that I could see what the rest of your bra looked like, because the strap was barely falling off your shoulder, and I know you tried to tuck it neatly under the straps of your dress, but darling, I want to love you like a disaster. I want to tear into your skin like your bones are a present, it's Christmas morning, and I'm that little kid sitting on the stairs, peaking. I want to line up my heart with yours like they are those fridge magnets with the thinest of barriers between them, your chest a tiny cage that I have the key to, hidden underneath my tongue. I want to rock you to that song your telling me is your favorite that I promise I'm not going to remember the name of. I want your sheets curled between your toes as you breathe into my neck, into my mouth, into my brain. I want to use your ribs like a guitar, stroke them in a rhythm only I know, only the two of us can hear the sound. I want to come this close to falling for you before I have to break free. You asked if I really had to go, I nodded, but in my mind I'm leaving you clues: footprints on your carpet, my belt on the dresser, my smile as I watched you through the crack of light between the bathroom door try to put your hair up ten different times before you came to bed, just so you can find my heart between the pillow cases as I pull my car out of the driveway.
0
Jan 7, 2016
Jan 7, 2016 at 8:31 PM UTC
Wanting to Stay
You asked if I was going to stay, I nodded, but I'm just waiting here until your coffee cools, until your feet go numb from sitting on them so you have to switch positions, until the letters magnetized to your fridge stop twisting themselves into "sorry." Until I feel better about not calling you later. Last night you asked if I liked Bon Iver, I nodded, but I only did that in hopes that I could see what the rest of your bra looked like, because the strap was barely falling off your shoulder, and I know you tried to tuck it neatly under the straps of your dress, but darling, I want to love you like a disaster. I want to tear into your skin like your bones are a present, it's Christmas morning, and I'm that little kid sitting on the stairs, peaking. I want to line up my heart with yours like they are those fridge magnets with the thinest of barriers between them, your chest a tiny cage that I have the key to, hidden underneath my tongue. I want to rock you to that song your telling me is your favorite that I promise I'm not going to remember the name of. I want your sheets curled between your toes as you breathe into my neck, into my mouth, into my brain. I want to use your ribs like a guitar, stroke them in a rhythm only I know, only the two of us can hear the sound. I want to come this close to falling for you before I have to break free. You asked if I really had to go, I nodded, but in my mind I'm leaving you clues: footprints on your carpet, my belt on the dresser, my smile as I watched you through the crack of light between the bathroom door try to put your hair up ten different times before you came to bed, just so you can find my heart between the pillow cases as I pull my car out of the driveway.
Continue reading...
37
We ate chicken sandwiches, mine no bun, at a table with an 80's geometric design on top of two silver metal legs with our legs intertwined. I tried to draw a comic on the wrapper, but you kept making me laugh by reenacting the conversation we had with the lady at the register who gave us the wrong change, but using a baby's voice instead. The boy mopping the floors wished desperately that we would leave, but you looked so cute with ketchup on your lip and I really, really didn't want you to drop me off. There was an Adele song on the radio that we've heard for the second time, but you sound more like a forgotten track to a John Hughes film-- a little heavy, a little messed up, a whammy bar progression with blonde hair who wore jeans and had a really cool car. I'd like to kiss you like Molly Ringwald does Judd Nelson in that movie we talked the whole way through as it played on Netflix. I'd like to wear you like a bad haircut; something no one else understands but I pull off effortlessly. You feel effortless to me. So refill my take-out cup with five different sodas, make a scene as we leave the restaurant, my hand laced up in yours, and let me drink you in as I pretend we aren't driving back home just yet.
0
Jan 6, 2016
Jan 6, 2016 at 12:18 AM UTC
Second Dates
I must have been at least eight years old when I started playing doctor in my garage, using long gardening tools as skeletons and drawing scattered veins with colored pencils on sketches of the human brain. I used to set up little name tags on the floorboards. My parents had a plastic bin full of sticks to help the plants grow straight that I used as pointers, attacking each ventricle of this made up heart with detail. I'd examine my imaginary person and tell the entire classroom just how to fix them up right. Now, I'm twenty one and I must have tried to fix you up at least ten different times. I molded you with my hands like soil, nurturing you with soft kisses and coffee in the mornings. I'd even try to pull your nightmares out from the roots, tie up the frayed ends, and throw them into the compost. I used my own spine like those pointers to help you grow up straight, grow up different than all the memories you'd blurt out like bubbles when trying to breathe underwater. Memories like falling asleep accidentally on the bus just to be awoken by the driver back at the station, the way that pity candy bar must have tasted as you waited in a nasty plastic seat for your mom who wasn't even worrying. I tried to dissect you from the outside in. Read your body like it was directions, but I'm still just a kid in a too big overalls playing doctor out in my garage. You are bigger than the pretend desks with the broken pencils inside. You are more fragile than the yarn that I would loop around my neck like a fake teacher's badge. You have way too many pieces for me to count on a skeleton, but if you let me I will try to memorize them all, label them with sidewalk chalk, put them together again with Elmer's glue. If you let me, I will let you slip on my nostalgia like a patient's gown, let you relive a tiny moment of the childhood that was stolen even if it's just for a little while, even if it's just pretend.
0
Jan 2, 2016
Jan 2, 2016 at 12:31 AM UTC
Out in the Garage
I must have been at least eight years old when I started playing doctor in my garage, using long gardening tools as skeletons and drawing scattered veins with colored pencils on sketches of the human brain. I used to set up little name tags on the floorboards. My parents had a plastic bin full of sticks to help the plants grow straight that I used as pointers, attacking each ventricle of this made up heart with detail. I'd examine my imaginary person and tell the entire classroom just how to fix them up right. Now, I'm twenty one and I must have tried to fix you up at least ten different times. I molded you with my hands like soil, nurturing you with soft kisses and coffee in the mornings. I'd even try to pull your nightmares out from the roots, tie up the frayed ends, and throw them into the compost. I used my own spine like those pointers to help you grow up straight, grow up different than all the memories you'd blurt out like bubbles when trying to breathe underwater. Memories like falling asleep accidentally on the bus just to be awoken by the driver back at the station, the way that pity candy bar must have tasted as you waited in a nasty plastic seat for your mom who wasn't even worrying. I tried to dissect you from the outside in. Read your body like it was directions, but I'm still just a kid in a too big overalls playing doctor out in my garage. You are bigger than the pretend desks with the broken pencils inside. You are more fragile than the yarn that I would loop around my neck like a fake teacher's badge. You have way too many pieces for me to count on a skeleton, but if you let me I will try to memorize them all, label them with sidewalk chalk, put them together again with Elmer's glue. If you let me, I will let you slip on my nostalgia like a patient's gown, let you relive a tiny moment of the childhood that was stolen even if it's just for a little while, even if it's just pretend.
Continue reading...
46
It was May, but we drove out to the shore anyway in my big sweater and purple cotton scarf wrapped around my neck, holding it up to my chin as we waited for the heat to start up in the car. My breath looked like a cloud when I laughed, my lips two inches from yours as I pulled you by the strings of your black sweatshirt. I grabbed two bags of sour patch kids, trying to throw them sideways into your mouth as you drove, a scattered trail of neon green and yellow left on the foot mat under the wheel, two our three stuck between the crease in your seat. I know it wasn't sunny, but I swear it tried to peak through the overcast, or maybe the gray sheen of it off the pavement is what made your face shine. Your black hair looked so cool on your pale skin, yelling at me to get my ***** red sneakers off the dashboard. I tried to write a little poem on your hand with my fingers as it traced your bones like a maze while you let it rest on the console. We played that CD from that band I didn't know you loved, and I promise I ******* up all the words, but I just like to hear your try to sing over me. I made you swear not to splash me when we tried to let the ocean kiss our toes, a salty welcome to the love affair I had with the way you made me bite my lip when I almost smiled too much at the way your eyes moved when you talked about one of your favorite things or about how big the ocean was and how small you were, even if you never said it just like that. I could tell what you meant. You did it anyway. The water was so cold on my cheeks, my ribs clashing into one another like a song my head hadn't had the time to learn yet. You held them in place while holding me. You kissed the summer from my lips and asked the sun to come out just for a moment while I made tiny castles out of pink shells and faded driftwood pieces leftover from the winter. We ran out of iced tea so we drank each other in, in layers, on the sand with our jeans rolled up to our ankles, letting the mask of almost blue skies envelope us in a Saturday afternoon spent figuring out little things like old memories or each other's favorite movies.
0
Dec 31, 2015
Dec 31, 2015 at 12:15 AM UTC
Coloring
It was May, but we drove out to the shore anyway in my big sweater and purple cotton scarf wrapped around my neck, holding it up to my chin as we waited for the heat to start up in the car. My breath looked like a cloud when I laughed, my lips two inches from yours as I pulled you by the strings of your black sweatshirt. I grabbed two bags of sour patch kids, trying to throw them sideways into your mouth as you drove, a scattered trail of neon green and yellow left on the foot mat under the wheel, two our three stuck between the crease in your seat. I know it wasn't sunny, but I swear it tried to peak through the overcast, or maybe the gray sheen of it off the pavement is what made your face shine. Your black hair looked so cool on your pale skin, yelling at me to get my ***** red sneakers off the dashboard. I tried to write a little poem on your hand with my fingers as it traced your bones like a maze while you let it rest on the console. We played that CD from that band I didn't know you loved, and I promise I ******* up all the words, but I just like to hear your try to sing over me. I made you swear not to splash me when we tried to let the ocean kiss our toes, a salty welcome to the love affair I had with the way you made me bite my lip when I almost smiled too much at the way your eyes moved when you talked about one of your favorite things or about how big the ocean was and how small you were, even if you never said it just like that. I could tell what you meant. You did it anyway. The water was so cold on my cheeks, my ribs clashing into one another like a song my head hadn't had the time to learn yet. You held them in place while holding me. You kissed the summer from my lips and asked the sun to come out just for a moment while I made tiny castles out of pink shells and faded driftwood pieces leftover from the winter. We ran out of iced tea so we drank each other in, in layers, on the sand with our jeans rolled up to our ankles, letting the mask of almost blue skies envelope us in a Saturday afternoon spent figuring out little things like old memories or each other's favorite movies.
Continue reading...
53
If you were to come to me in the form of a paper person linked by the knuckles of other paper people, I would decorate you with thick markers and call you my soldier. I'd crown you in yellow smudges, give you a sword out yarn and some cheap glue. You came to me in the form of a leftover sports player with knees that needed therapy and a size too big gym shorts. I fell for the sound of you hitting your head off the microwave when we were trying to kiss in my kitchen, the way your hair felt in the spaces between my fingers, how you always took the left sock off before the right. I made you into the paper figure next to mine, the half who's creases matched up perfectly, who we wanted the same exact things as I. If you were to come to me now in the form of water I'd boil you to make tea. I'd put three sugars into you when you beg me for none. I'd make you into some tragedy that I'd hide underneath my bed in the way of nasty journal entries and tired poems. I'd love you like a miracle, like a prayer, when really you are just a guy who loves funny movies and can't wake up for breakfast on time.
0
Dec 29, 2015
Dec 29, 2015 at 2:07 PM UTC
When a Person Becomes More Than a Person
My peach yogurt tastes like your skin in the morning when you used to stay at my apartment, the leftover sweat of a night spent loving each other, and the sun slipping through my ***** blinds, while I'm eating my breakfast at my desk checking emails, always peeking over at you, bare-chested, snoring through the sound of my fan and my music turned down extra low. It's five months later and my peach yogurt tastes strangely like that iced tea I had instead of liquor on the night my friends threw a party in my living room, us sneaking off to my bedroom just to kiss ourselves through another evening we'd rather spend in our underwear watching a movie over smiling in group pictures or dancing to cheap country music. It's so much later and my yogurt still tastes a little bitter, a little sour on my tongue as I try to swallow a breakup that's bigger than a jawbreaker. It still kind of tastes like the bottom of my sink as I put my dishes in it just to wake you up, watch you get dressed in a pair grey sweatpants, sticky hair that I'd comb through. It's far too late for me to think about your hand in mine as we'd walk as far as we could before we'd have to separate. It's far too late and far too many people have intercepted your memories and turned them into something new to smile about, but today I pulled the lid off the container and licked the silver side clean just to be reminded of how sweet things like you used to taste.
0
Dec 21, 2015
Dec 21, 2015 at 6:56 PM UTC
Yogurt
You dipped into me like a pool you hadn't swam in all summer, a hole in the back of your mind you almost forgot was still there. It was as if you predicted the big splash, the droplets like crystals I could see through to your heart, reading your feelings like a bestseller on a lounge chair, basking in the sun on the side. You broke through my surface with your hands, those hands that strip me down to just my tan and hold my ribs like a steering wheel, driving our bodies together as I kiss the chlorine from your lips. I'd wrap you up in a towel just to trace the slope of it from hip to hip, use that momentum to tell you how much I love the way your smile looks when you think my eyes are closed as we lay on top of the sheets with a fan circulating in the limited space we leave between my baby sundress and your khaki shorts, our bare feet playing with each others toes. I like the way your hands feel in my hair, pulling it down the line drawn on my back with your knuckles, landing in the dimples of my back like a raft, floating on the feeling suspended in this moment where I bite your lip and you sigh into another kiss. I like how it doesn't get dark until eight, how you make little circles around my hipbones, the sound of your laugh as it bounces off my own, smiling into another push as you pull my heart over yours into the shade to cool.
0
Dec 15, 2015
Dec 15, 2015 at 8:23 PM UTC
Swimming
We killed the lights and found the way to each other’s lips like magnets who had been denied their center of gravity for awhile. You stripped me down, measured my sweet spots out in sugar spoons, and savored me like a treat you hadn’t had since you were a kid, all the nostalgia landing on your tongue as you molded me with your hands. My ribs pushed back then pulled again, like bread, underneath the covers. You whispered my name like a song you can’t let yourself forget the words to. I followed the map of your neck with my kisses, retracing my steps as we danced in my bed to the familiar sound of a tiny fan and the TV turned down low, the light making shadows on your cheeks as the screen changed, my eyes dodging them just to capture a clearer image of the face I dreamed and dreamed of again. You know my body like a monologue, writing me all the way through, smiling at your favorite parts, and every time I fall into this routine I hope that maybe this ending is different, maybe you’ve decided to rewrite the last page. Maybe I won’t have to look back at our sour memories, maybe this time we will leave the bookmark in the same spot and kiss each other through all those times we said it had been too long.
0
Dec 8, 2015
Dec 8, 2015 at 10:55 AM UTC
Familiar