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Rafael Melendez Feb 2016
When you're hurt and don't know what to do. I can be your invisible man, You can ignore me and I won't ignore you.
You can keep me around when you're feeling down, and I'll be sure to know my place. You can pretend you haven't seen my face, that you don't even know me, like a brand new confessional.
Once I've lost my use, I'll leave you be with no excuse.
Rafael Melendez Feb 2016
Now all is misery in the beauty of others, I admire their eyes and think of her. I admire the way they can make me laugh and think of her. I admire their passion and think of her.
I try my best not to hurt them and *I think of her.
Rafael Melendez Feb 2016
I could call her my pretty baby, she could call me her fool. We could take a nice night out, keep our hands to ourselves and pretend that life was just a game, and we were it's tools.
God could take our hearts as a memoir of the night, crystallized, to keep pure and whole. Held in a pedestal, for all to awe at. And we could repeat that day over and over.
*That would be my heaven.
Rafael Melendez Jan 2016
I am a very sad and tired little boy, with little to look forward to. Not  a birthday, not an adventure, not a curiosity.
Everyday I realize what I lack, or I don't.
I'm only taking what is given to me, and trying not to look back.
  Jan 2016 Rafael Melendez
unwritten
she was a poet,
and he was her pen.
in him,
she always found words to write,
songs to sing,
thoughts to think.

he'd smile,
and kiss her softly,
and say,
"write me a poem."

and she would.
she'd put poe,
and whitman,
and shakespeare to shame,
and she'd write a poem that made his eyes water.

she'd compare him
to a rose with no thorns,
a book with no end,
a world with no poverty --
the things we all wish for,
but can never attain.

//

he asked her one day,
"what am i?"
and so she picked up her pen,
and began the usual:
you are the shining sun after a hurricane,
with rays that open the eyes of the blind.

but he stopped her after those two lines,
and said that this time,
he didn't want any metaphors,
or similes,
or analogies.
he wanted the truth.

and so on that night,
as he slept,
the poet picked up her pen,
and she wrote.

she wrote,
then thought better of it,
then started over again,
and this cycle continued well into the early hours of the morning,
until suddenly,
she wrote, frantic,
if i can't love you for what you really are,
have i ever really loved you at all?


this, too,
she thought better of,
condemning it to the trash.

the next morning the poet was gone,
her final work a mere two words:

i'm sorry.

(a.m.)
this is more of a story than a poem but i like how it came out so leave thoughts & comments please
Rafael Melendez Jan 2016
I may not remember the names of the songs we used to sing together. Regardless, I adored them as you did. And as much as you can deny now, they once belonged to us.
Rafael Melendez Jan 2016
An insomniac of life, not quite awake, but not asleep through the days and the nights. Using the remainder of his innocence as a trail to show him where he's been and where he hasn't. Leaving behind scraps of paper to show them it wasn't a complete waste of time.
Drowsily talking to himself in his head as a voice echoes through his ears.

"Oh.. Wait, what did you just say?"
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