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tladdis
tladdis
41/M Artist who enjoys trying to write. I'm very much enjoying the poetry on this site, and the site itself. It's a breath of fresh air.
i met the girl with the marbled skin in the bus queue drunk, naked white arms, getting wet, pressed against me in the darkened apron a friend of someone who called me friend but whose name or face or accent I forgot within a season of course i noticed her scars shiny, thick, swirls of burnt skin on cheeks, arms, hands; some the very shape of the bandages which held them in place when she was a baby pink chewing gum stretched over ankles and elbows she was funny sharp and attentive she half squinted her eyes when she listened to me i knew she was watching me watching her plump wet lips painted metallic pink pushed into a betty boop square by her cheek patches she gave male celebrity names to her huge ******* we sat together on the top deck and talked so feverishly we missed a fight at the back of the bus (not so much a fight, an ambush the tipsy, loud, student was never in a position to return a blow - even if he did have the skill or fire - after the local boy’s heavy boot crashed into his jaw) when I met her again after the summer we matched like socks no words or hesitation no doubts we shared every sofa, room, bed we ate together, smoked together, missed lectures together, and drank so often and so hard our friends - also students, drinkers, fiends - warned us to settle down in the mornings when i lay in bed with a silent goth a bipolar italian a hairy, angry artist a tiny farm girl i would text her and beg her to come save me in the end it was our not having *** that tore us from each other when we slept naked on her mattress on the floor i never shuffled over in the black never reached out for those scarred limbs of polished wood or those heavy folding ******* i just slept the sleep of the dead while she read oscar wilde wearing nothing but a head torch her flatmate two years older, wake and baker, mass of curly hair and scarves and books burst in one night demanded to know if we were having *** and our peers kept misunderstanding demanding that we either **** or marry (or preferably both, in that order) kept asking what we did at night two naked adults must surely be rutting putting ourselves inside one another do it or stop it get on with it or stop pretending she began to listen to the whispers one night she asked me why i didn’t view her as a woman i said i did but more importantly as a friend it was easier for her to think i found her ugly than to realise i found her much too beautiful
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Jan 8, 2015
Jan 8, 2015 at 6:04 AM UTC
the girl with the marbled skin
i met the girl with the marbled skin in the bus queue drunk, naked white arms, getting wet, pressed against me in the darkened apron a friend of someone who called me friend but whose name or face or accent I forgot within a season of course i noticed her scars shiny, thick, swirls of burnt skin on cheeks, arms, hands; some the very shape of the bandages which held them in place when she was a baby pink chewing gum stretched over ankles and elbows she was funny sharp and attentive she half squinted her eyes when she listened to me i knew she was watching me watching her plump wet lips painted metallic pink pushed into a betty boop square by her cheek patches she gave male celebrity names to her huge ******* we sat together on the top deck and talked so feverishly we missed a fight at the back of the bus (not so much a fight, an ambush the tipsy, loud, student was never in a position to return a blow - even if he did have the skill or fire - after the local boy’s heavy boot crashed into his jaw) when I met her again after the summer we matched like socks no words or hesitation no doubts we shared every sofa, room, bed we ate together, smoked together, missed lectures together, and drank so often and so hard our friends - also students, drinkers, fiends - warned us to settle down in the mornings when i lay in bed with a silent goth a bipolar italian a hairy, angry artist a tiny farm girl i would text her and beg her to come save me in the end it was our not having *** that tore us from each other when we slept naked on her mattress on the floor i never shuffled over in the black never reached out for those scarred limbs of polished wood or those heavy folding ******* i just slept the sleep of the dead while she read oscar wilde wearing nothing but a head torch her flatmate two years older, wake and baker, mass of curly hair and scarves and books burst in one night demanded to know if we were having *** and our peers kept misunderstanding demanding that we either **** or marry (or preferably both, in that order) kept asking what we did at night two naked adults must surely be rutting putting ourselves inside one another do it or stop it get on with it or stop pretending she began to listen to the whispers one night she asked me why i didn’t view her as a woman i said i did but more importantly as a friend it was easier for her to think i found her ugly than to realise i found her much too beautiful
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95
rig was fair spiked hair big like an oil rig six foot tall square shoulders coffee-stain birthmark on his cheek the rest of him freckled too feared to be fought betrayed by his own intellect pacing the lino tiles like a zoo wolf wrapping tape around pins to make blow darts firing them from rolled-up worksheets sticking in smelly teenage scalps sticking in the hived cheeks of the quiet boys muttering accusations at the closeted gay english teacher total immunity guaranteed through hulk and bulk and brazen cruelty and the fear and the jeer of the crowd bevans was dark six foot one thick black brush hair face like a gnarled foot broken nose with one nostril welded shut nasal jackal yap-yap-yaps manic eyes with natural mascara giving the girls piggy rides to hold their sunned hockey thighs in his dinner plate hands bevans of the dark monster **** flashed around the library the dinner hall bevans and his boys pulling themselves behind the science desks wiping their *** on the curtains squawking, crying with laughter while the rest of us set fire to peanuts on tripods with bunsen burners our pale shrivelled pride tucked away in the underwear our mothers bought us for years rig went with a girl who looked like a pretty frog ‘i’ve been with her so long i’ve literally felt her **** grow in my hands’ she lived in a small village known for its golf course and when he discovered ecstasy and diazepam dissolved in buckets of lager and dumped her without warning she turned to older boys and farmers for comfort she became known at school as the nineteenth hole rig and bevans were friends of mine i kept them close with quips and hoots and indifference begging each day would provide some amusement some mouse in the grass to draw their keen eyes and sharp tobacco tongues to keep their necks from twisting back to snap and bite down on the weak of the pack which happened, of course, every few days when my mother asked why my shirt was soaked in slashes of blue ink my hair was burned there were blow dart spots of dried blood on my neck and hands i told her it was a game
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Dec 28, 2014
Dec 28, 2014 at 3:22 PM UTC
the two school bullies
rig was fair spiked hair big like an oil rig six foot tall square shoulders coffee-stain birthmark on his cheek the rest of him freckled too feared to be fought betrayed by his own intellect pacing the lino tiles like a zoo wolf wrapping tape around pins to make blow darts firing them from rolled-up worksheets sticking in smelly teenage scalps sticking in the hived cheeks of the quiet boys muttering accusations at the closeted gay english teacher total immunity guaranteed through hulk and bulk and brazen cruelty and the fear and the jeer of the crowd bevans was dark six foot one thick black brush hair face like a gnarled foot broken nose with one nostril welded shut nasal jackal yap-yap-yaps manic eyes with natural mascara giving the girls piggy rides to hold their sunned hockey thighs in his dinner plate hands bevans of the dark monster **** flashed around the library the dinner hall bevans and his boys pulling themselves behind the science desks wiping their *** on the curtains squawking, crying with laughter while the rest of us set fire to peanuts on tripods with bunsen burners our pale shrivelled pride tucked away in the underwear our mothers bought us for years rig went with a girl who looked like a pretty frog ‘i’ve been with her so long i’ve literally felt her **** grow in my hands’ she lived in a small village known for its golf course and when he discovered ecstasy and diazepam dissolved in buckets of lager and dumped her without warning she turned to older boys and farmers for comfort she became known at school as the nineteenth hole rig and bevans were friends of mine i kept them close with quips and hoots and indifference begging each day would provide some amusement some mouse in the grass to draw their keen eyes and sharp tobacco tongues to keep their necks from twisting back to snap and bite down on the weak of the pack which happened, of course, every few days when my mother asked why my shirt was soaked in slashes of blue ink my hair was burned there were blow dart spots of dried blood on my neck and hands i told her it was a game
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75
the day after christmas the morning after a quarrel i took my daughter for a walk setting off from my parents’ house to walk my hometown streets in the eerie damp silence of a public holiday the park was too wet and cold for play i felt bad dragging her down there she walked a few planks, slipped thought the mud was dog **** and cried a little we abandoned ship aimed towards a bar in town where we could find hot chocolate and beer as we were leaving the park a young couple arrived with a bounding labrador a boxing day stroll a breath of fresh air for the fresh young couple ten years fresher than i him, tall and willowy her, short, round hips and bottom pretty face and plaited hair wellies, jeans and fleece coats she looked warm and friendly he looked relaxed carefree they strolled past but didn't see us my daughter asked me a question but I was peering into the young couple’s lives being obvious imagining them under fresh white cotton sheets on a lazy sunday morning after a party where they each had a few drinks not too many where they sat together all night he doesn’t always smoke **** when he drinks and they never ***** they’re never too drunk for *** when she’s tipsy she rides him pulls extra *** faces she doesn’t mind him seeing her floppy ******* it excites him but the morning after it’s simple missionary his bony hips pushing up into her warm seat eyes locked a tray by the bed with bacon crusts and empty tea mugs simple pleasures if either one of them had caught my eye in the park my stares were screaming: ‘i’m having marital problems and i’m honestly scared! i want what you have!’ but they didn’t look the dog ran ahead and the girl threw a wet tennis ball but her aim was bad and she caught her lover square on the back of the head it was a soft throw it didn't hurt him but he was livid he spun around and glared at her she apologised and trotted towards him he stormed away stopped by the tennis court fence hand to the back of his head to mark the insult when she reached him he shouted at her about her lack of judgement her eyes widened and nostrils flared my daughter was still talking to me i held her cold, clammy little hands and we watched the young man shouting at the cowering young woman and i realised that there was a serious possibility that no one is happy we’re all ******** familiarity does breed contempt i threw my daughter on my shoulders and showed her the tennis shed where i used to smoke cigarettes
0
Dec 27, 2014
Dec 27, 2014 at 7:17 AM UTC
the couple in the park
the day after christmas the morning after a quarrel i took my daughter for a walk setting off from my parents’ house to walk my hometown streets in the eerie damp silence of a public holiday the park was too wet and cold for play i felt bad dragging her down there she walked a few planks, slipped thought the mud was dog **** and cried a little we abandoned ship aimed towards a bar in town where we could find hot chocolate and beer as we were leaving the park a young couple arrived with a bounding labrador a boxing day stroll a breath of fresh air for the fresh young couple ten years fresher than i him, tall and willowy her, short, round hips and bottom pretty face and plaited hair wellies, jeans and fleece coats she looked warm and friendly he looked relaxed carefree they strolled past but didn't see us my daughter asked me a question but I was peering into the young couple’s lives being obvious imagining them under fresh white cotton sheets on a lazy sunday morning after a party where they each had a few drinks not too many where they sat together all night he doesn’t always smoke **** when he drinks and they never ***** they’re never too drunk for *** when she’s tipsy she rides him pulls extra *** faces she doesn’t mind him seeing her floppy ******* it excites him but the morning after it’s simple missionary his bony hips pushing up into her warm seat eyes locked a tray by the bed with bacon crusts and empty tea mugs simple pleasures if either one of them had caught my eye in the park my stares were screaming: ‘i’m having marital problems and i’m honestly scared! i want what you have!’ but they didn’t look the dog ran ahead and the girl threw a wet tennis ball but her aim was bad and she caught her lover square on the back of the head it was a soft throw it didn't hurt him but he was livid he spun around and glared at her she apologised and trotted towards him he stormed away stopped by the tennis court fence hand to the back of his head to mark the insult when she reached him he shouted at her about her lack of judgement her eyes widened and nostrils flared my daughter was still talking to me i held her cold, clammy little hands and we watched the young man shouting at the cowering young woman and i realised that there was a serious possibility that no one is happy we’re all ******** familiarity does breed contempt i threw my daughter on my shoulders and showed her the tennis shed where i used to smoke cigarettes
Continue reading...
90
all these things led you here the oversized headlines of your father’s newspaper and his father's before him the pakistani shopkeeper who accused you of stealing whose bark roasted your pimpled face the boy at college you flirted with the tall boy with the sleek curtained hair whose family had fled iraq who made you laugh and nudged your knees who went to study medicine and never texted you back your dad’s boss the fat Jamaican who sacked him at easter just a handful of years before his retirement the girl at work beautiful girl in the headscarf who married a man she’d never seen and when you asked her if he was a good man she replied joyously ‘yes! the best man!’ the many taxi drivers who ferry you home and overcharge you watching you in the dark mirror beetle eyes glistening caressing the face you prepared so neatly now blotchy and wet ketchup clown bloated in the window the face of second generation ivory all these things led you here
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Dec 19, 2014
Dec 19, 2014 at 6:46 AM UTC
the racist girl from the youtube comments section