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sophie
I hang on you like shirts hang in your closet and I cling to you like clothes cling to your skin and I wish for you like you wish on stars and I wait for you while your patience runs thin I cry for you like you'll never cry for me and I'm close to the end and you've yet to begin
0
Jan 9, 2014
Jan 9, 2014 at 10:36 PM UTC
you and me
you told me you loved me on the cold metal stairs with tears in your eyes and of course I said it back but I've known all along you needed more than you could ever give and you took my young heart in your hands and told me you were all I would ever deserve
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Oct 30, 2013
Oct 30, 2013 at 6:33 PM UTC
Untitled
the light shining off your hair blinds my eyes so I shield them from you and our all night fights and I never learned not to wait so I'm still here wondering when they will come for me and take me to the warm place where all we breathe is the trees and all we see is the heavy air that pushes us down and up and back and forth unlike when my little hands push against your unbending will
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Oct 30, 2013
Oct 30, 2013 at 6:29 PM UTC
Untitled
My grandfather was a Southern Baptist minister, but from the way people talk about him, you’d think he was Jesus himself. I never met him, my grandfather, but I know he must have had big, strong hands, And a smile that would make his eyes light up like the only things that mattered were family, God, and a warm dinner. I know that sinners would have swallowed the Devil whole rather than face my Pennsylvania preacher. And I know that he was handy with a belt, when he needed to be, But generous with a pat on the back or a firm handshake. Most of all, I know that he broke my mother’s heart when his heart couldn’t beat anymore, and so he left the preacher’s wife and their babies to find his Maker in the sky. Sometimes I wonder what he would have done when he got there, And no one met him at the pearly gates. I wonder how long he would have looked before giving up, and if he would have tried to come on back home. I wonder if he hadn’t been sure his home lay above the clouds, If he would have fought harder for his time in this paradise.
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Aug 27, 2013
Aug 27, 2013 at 8:00 PM UTC
Home
Stacks of records filled my bookcases like extinct animals just looking for a home And you told me to burn them, so the music could float up into the trees and teach the leaves to dance to Talking Heads and Tchaikovsky. But as the records burned, the smoke filled my lungs and smothered the leaves, and I realized that even the best poetry will leave you empty, wondering when words stopped being the truth.
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Jul 9, 2013
Jul 9, 2013 at 11:57 PM UTC
Let It Burn
It was hot. So hot that the sun that burnt my skin was not the sun at all, but rather a deep warmth in the atmosphere. It didn't come from above. No, this sun was in the trees, and the grass, and the earth. It was me. Or, it was of me, with me, on me. The heat was more than anything else. I was drowning in it. That whole summer. I couldn't let it go. Or rather, it couldn't let me go. Of its grasp. Which held longer than anything else, felt deeper and sensed who I was. This heat that followed me, beside me and in front of me. I felt it. More than anything else.
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Jul 8, 2013
Jul 8, 2013 at 8:13 PM UTC
The Heat
I've never been much of a religious man. I know I don't seem it, anyway. My hands are rough. My body lingers in the empty, old house, not in the tall steeple among the heavens or the barren earth and the hells. My family were farmers. They harvested, and when they didn't, they played cards at the dinner table and slept heavy nights. The dark was always darker and the night always deeper. But the days, my god the days, they were bright and mean like you can't believe. I've worked my whole life. I was so young I could barely wrap my hands around the levers I was pulling, or reach the pedals I was pushing. But I can still feel the work, the tough, wreck your head, break your body kind of work. Carrying, lifting, burying, digging, dirt-under-your-finger-nails kind of work. It made my hands rough. It made me tired. But my father, he never tired. He never fought shy of the heavens and the hells. His spirit rejoices in the tall steeple, and he laughs when I try in vain to learn from the preacher these many Sunday mornings.
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Jul 8, 2013
Jul 8, 2013 at 8:12 PM UTC
Sunday Mornings
I heard you outside our house yesterday On the sidewalk, Walking your overpriced dogs and ignoring your overachieving children. I heard you say our house was a “real fixer-upper”. Well you know what I say? I say our house was built 100 years before you had even popped into the world Your face already pinched up like a pompous Persian cat. And I say our home has housed more joy, pain, and love in one week Than you have felt in your entire life. And so what if it’s in need of a little paint here and there And the grass could use some water And the roof could be patched up a bit? So what if we don’t have petunias the color of your pastel cardigan Or a shiny new coat of paint as thick as your makeup Or ceilings as high and mighty as your ego? I’ll tell you what we do have. We do have flowers I planted with my mother a few years back, that come back each year rain or shine. We do have a porch swing that’s carried the weight of 3 generations and a rocking chair I remember climbing into at 2 years old. And we do have a family who loves this house almost as much as we love each other. So next time you go calling our house a “real fixer-upper”, Walk in my shoes for a day And see if you would change one brick Paint one wall Or erase one memory.
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Jul 8, 2013
Jul 8, 2013 at 7:51 PM UTC
Perspective
I’m going to make you a promise. Right now. I’m going to promise you that I will never let you down, that I will always be polite at Thanksgiving dinner with your parents, that I will never lie, that I will always kiss you goodbye. That I will hug you like I never want to let you go, that I will never hurt you, that I will consult you before getting a haircut, that I will stay by your side when you’re misty-eyed. But that’s not enough, is it? That’s not enough for anyone. You wouldn’t be happy with that. And that’s okay. Because I can’t promise that you will always love me, and I can’t promise that we will be happy together forever. But I can promise you this: I will always love you. I will love you until I close my eyes for the very last time, and welcome that blinding light, or deafening dark, whichever makes it easier for you to let me go. And even after you’ve moved on, I will still love you. And I’m not one to break promises.
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Jul 8, 2013
Jul 8, 2013 at 7:48 PM UTC
Promise
The seconds pour out of the clock. The dark car on the street speeds home. But I know that I have to wait. I used to be patient. But maybe the whole ordeal slowed my heart a bit. Now each heartbeat that used to mark the minutes, Marks the hours, and each day feels like years of my life speeding away. You told me you would be back for me. You said it would just be me and you, kid. I waited, and waited, until I realized you weren’t out there waiting for me too. And that I wasn’t the only one left waiting with no one to wait for.
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Jul 8, 2013
Jul 8, 2013 at 7:48 PM UTC
Waiting