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  Aug 29 Dani Just Dani
LL
I have within me
a thousand year's worth of want —
and an empty bed
2025/120
I get sad sometimes.
People shouldn’t get that sad.
It’s hard to watch.

I don’t get violent.
I don’t hurt the ones I love,
only myself.

I don’t know if I’m sick,
but I dream of the girl
sleeping beside me,
her arms open,
her eyes too sad for her age.

Behind her, the muhly grass burns,
flames catching in my eyes.

Sometimes I think
of my grandpa in his casket
a man who never loved my mom
the way he should have.
His corpse marked with stars
from a war long ago.

And I wonder,
when they close my casket,
what marks will they find on me?

If I think too hard,
I find answers
in the smoke of incense.
It smells like jasmine.

I have fought wars of my own.
And the first death
always happens in the heart.
  Aug 25 Dani Just Dani
nivek
twisted spirit
deep denial
heartfelt disgust

away with your words
back to your own head
you absolutely filthy spirit
Flirting with the sky,
Mars winks as the blue moon drifts,
Stars learn solitude.
Life’s turning around,
Little by little,
Fear fills my
Lungs with the drag
Of another cigarette,
I can’t be thrown
To the dogs again,
I don’t think I’ll survive
This time, or the next
Or the next after that.

So I sit quiet,
Letting the smoke
Stain my fingers,
Thinking maybe
This is what’s left of me,
A body that keeps moving,
Even when the soul
Is tired of staying.
I’ve seen life take
a librarian,
a beautiful woman,
intuition like no other.
Cancer, they said.

My friend really loved her.
She was the first
to notice he was gay,
and she accepted him.

So we climbed into his
Toyota Tercel,
winding down curves,
up the mountain,
toward the funeral home.

People sat in rows of nine,
a special couch reserved
beside the casket.

The dead have always
bothered me,
like a one sided conversation,
like the air in my lungs
was a debt I owed.

So I sat in the back,
people watching as I do,
a wallflower,
star jasmine pressing
against the concrete.

Close to the exit,
in case discomfort
asked me to leave.

Then her husband walked in,
a man I’d never seen,
only heard in stories.

He went straight to her,
pressed his hands
against her face,
like he was
trying to hold on.

He cried.
His voice tore
the room apart.
Collapsed to his knees,
hands trembling with rage,
words ripping from his throat,
sharp, jagged, impossible
to take back.

Not a prayer.
Not a conversation.
It was a howl
that made the
walls bend,
love dressed in grief,
so fierce
it seemed to claw
at the air itself.

A good lover
she must have been.

And I understood:
maybe no one listens,
but the silence
always knows
what to say.
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