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The wind bears with it stories
of faces, bodies, and stillness,
It's graceful yet forceful touch ,
which carries the birds.
surfaces stretching seas,
and sends a breath of life
to the flowers, grass and trees.*

Amanda. F (c) 2017
Spark, fiery tempest
Amid trees dances wildly
Creating new ash.
"Creator" by Givealittlelove
Sorry for the wait ;*
Lilac,
wind,
and
laughter.

Moments
framed
in
Time
.
There is a key
To an abyss of thoughts
So irrelevant, so minute
It surprises me what I remember
When the gate to these thoughts
Is opened

And is the reason why I'm still awake
Two hours after going to bed
 Feb 2017 Micahel De Tomasso
Day
home at 2 a.m., falling over the fence
god, sometimes I'm ******* dense
forgetting to lock the back door
stumble downstairs, clothes on the floor
respond to a text, not sure what I said
black out, or maybe i'm dead
4 hours later, an alarm wakes me
taste of ***** in my mouth,get up to ***
strip down, need a shower
god, i have school in an hour
fade in and out, still not here
living trying to escape a fear*
"Who the hell have I become?''
do you ever feel like a failure?
We gathered our water
and packs at daybreak
to hike hand in hand
toward the distant ruin—
a tall stone chimney planted
on otherwise empty acreage,
a kudzu-covered tower,
the ghost of a farmhouse
now a home to field mice,
black beetles and bats,
with bricks the color
of weathered blood,
vertebrae stacked
a century and a half ago
by a stonemason’s craft,
still solid and bonded
despite the slow decay
of arthritic mortar.

How long have we
walked together?

The morning
is all we have
left to ponder.
We walk for hours;
the chimney grows
larger at our approach.
I want to ask you
a question about
the night we met,
what you said
just before I held
you for the first time,
but then I catch sight
of my hand and realize
I am walking alone,
moving inexorably
toward a ruination
of my own making.
How could I have been
so careless? Unable
to stop, every step
strips something away:
my hair thins and falls,
as white and weak
as sickled wiregrass;
another step and my
body atomizes into
the stuff of stars,
pollen scattered
on a rising wind.

So this is what it
feels like to decay.

By the time I reach
the ruin I am mostly
cinder and ash,
a sorry vestige
sown in a quiet field,
a forgotten landmark
that strangers will visit,
if only to contemplate
how the evening fog
spindles like smoke
along the enduring
column of my spine.
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