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Bri Nov 2014
When I fly away,
shimmering waves of seed, golden under
the dimming light of this August evening and
the soft breeze ripples
the sea of corn, spread wide
over the body of land,

the rocking chair sighs unchanging motion,
back and forth, back and forth,
as the abyssal field stretches. I am cast
into the waves;
I float on to this serene place and

from the porch, I breathe in the emerging dew,
the quiet dampness of summer
the dirt on the road.
The fire flies, the cicadas
come out looking for each other,
flashing meager lights,
pulsing chirps through the twilight.

The sunset fills the sky, the house, clings to my hair like
dust caught in a sunlit room, suspended
in the air in a dance of gravity.
I am stunned with fondness, it
soothes me, pours from my skin like beads of sweat
dripping down my collar bone.

Free from the sting within myself,
I sit, I rock.
The image of myself on the rocking chair on my grandparents farmhouse porch in Illinois.
Bri Nov 2014
Sway, sway
pinch the corner of your dress
with your ******* and thumb as you
twirl, twirl, round and round,
Oh how your hair flies, your pearls drape down your
neck, like a chandelier pronouncing you,
introducing us to your crystallized grace.

He cannot help himself, his urge to squeeze
and hold you dear,
Dear you're his queen,
even at sixteen, with your June baby-on-the-way belly,
he watches as you swayed, and twirl, twirl,
you remove his fear, wash it away from his face
with your gentle fingers,
you introduce him to your grace,
later,

You cut your hair short, put away your dresses,
packed the pearls to the side--
until you dressed me, giggled as I tripped in your
satin gowns, shuffled clumsily in your high heels,
you tied ribbons to my hair, needing no brush,
twirling my hair through your fingers,
you tell me to sway, to twirl,
you place the pearls over my head,
I was never afraid.

Now your hair is gone, I can no longer
wear your dresses, or shine in your pearls,
but you are still a chandelier, existing
now more than ever.
Your grace never bowed to age, your eyes
are still glinting, shining and
he is scared,
I am scared,
we are all scared, Grandmother,
but you stand straight, removing clothes pins
from the line outside.

We watch you waltz with white linen,
and I see you before you disappear behind the sheets,
I see your silhouette twirling, your dress and your hair--
I see you,
unafraid, still swaying.
My Grandmother was just diagnosed with terminal cancer.
Bri Jan 2013
i'm just weird
i think too much,
swivel thoughts around my mind
until i suffocate my brain,
i think too much
i think too much
i think too much.

i wanna stop,
for just a second
and apologize, then
i realize,
i'm thinking too much
i'm thinking too much,

just shut up.

— The End —