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Dawn-Hunter May 2014
There is a place I
knew once.
With jazz music playing
and handwritten scriptures
on the windows.
Every wall was a tapestry,
but the floor was never clean.
Flowers bloomed from the cacti
and books read themselves.

"Cast your fate to the wind"

It didn't have to make sense,
it only had to be real.

Candlesticks never burned
evenly
but everything was in sync.
Low lighting made for easier sight,
but only when the sun was in late bloom.

"Buy new dishwasher
or get old one repaired"

It didn't have to make sense,
it only had to be real.

I took to dancing in the kitchen
when I knew everyone was busy
burying their seeds.

Patches of paint in her eye,
they changed shape every new moon.
Place your broken down dreams

behind the garage,
you don't need them
anymore.

Somedays I slip into the stars and
swim in their forbidden pool.
It is a secret we share, a love
affair far too scandalous for print.

Every morning the rooster crowed,
but never at the same time.

"Don't get too close dear, the oven burns"

It never made sense,
but ever was it real.
Not my usual style, and I admit it doesn't make sense. But basically I was writing down everything I saw, things I heard and perceived about a place I was without really explaining them.
Dawn-Hunter May 2014
Rainbow danced across my face
as water nestled into my skin.
I wasn't the only screechingly happy child
that day.

It was a festival celebrating art.

But that's not why people came.
Cheap liquor
and a small band singing the blues,
that's what really drew the people in.

But I was young.
And I was drunk on rainbows and sprinklers;
far too juvenile to see the sadness.

People stumbled around me
it was early.

No one saw the art.

No one saw the beauty but the little children
playing in the sprinklers.
Too drunk on rainbows to know the difference.
An excercise in childhood. Of a time I never understood.
Dawn-Hunter May 2014
Anytime I walk at dusk
I never raise my voice above
a whisper
for fear of betraying
the night's secret
to the world of man.
Dawn-Hunter May 2014
Watching someone's heart die
tastes a lot more like dirt than rust.
It is fresh
and moist,
the taste of life
still lingering in its clutches.

Seeing something great sputter out does not leave a
chemical aftertaste,
for nothing has yet changed,
only dimmed.

As I watch your past
play before my eyes like an old silent film,
I wonder how easily I might guess what
words
you were mouthing.

But the film is over,
the negatives never produced
and all we're left with is a
man of little importance
and left behind potential.

On the phone tonight you told me of how you used to paint
using tie dye
and I guess it was the first time I realized
if I had been your age,
we would have been
good friends.

But what hurts more
than watching your life
pass before my eyes
is looking back on my own life and seeing
what you used to be.

I see you painting the sunset and blasting U2 while cooking dinner.

I see the well worn pages of your script for the latest play-
notes hastily scratched in,
scratched out,
and rewritten.

I see the way you used to speak
when talking to your church
and it hurts because
as hard as I try,
I can't FEEL it anymore.

It seems that now all I feel is the way you
hit
your breaks or
slam
your computer shut
almost as if your heart knows how much is going to waste
and there simply isn't any better way to communicate the pain
that comes from knowing
you've given up.




I remember the day you sold your first painting.
Your eyes were bright and they twinkled.
But now I look at your bedroom walls covered ceiling to floor with the paintings no one ever bought

and I wonder if they sing you to sleep

and I wonder if they haunt your dreams.

And I wonder,
watching you move slower than you used to,
if you gave up your potential without a fight.
A slam poem/regular poem about my father. He had so much talent in his younger days, and now he's getting older and I see him just giving up the idea of ever becoming more than what he is now.
  May 2014 Dawn-Hunter
Mike Hauser
I have this special mirror
That hangs upon my wall
No outwardly reflection can be seen
For it searches deep the soul

There are days when I am passing by
That I divert my eyes
Afraid with one haunting glance I'll see
Deep into this so called life

It can be overwhelming
This feeling of fear and doubt
When I look too deep I'm afraid I'll see
The reflection is of myself
  May 2014 Dawn-Hunter
Mike Hauser
There is this man in Central Park
Has the most extraordinary cart
Doesn't sell hot dogs or magazines
What he sells are the best of homemade dreams

He makes them right there on the spot
Handle with care cause they come out hot
Has a magical toaster he drops them in
Before he sets them in the cooling bin

He has dreams that dream of traveling
Either by land or calming sea
Buy any dream that you desire
His most popular is the dream to fly

He has dreams of fixing past mistakes
The dreams he makes are not too late
He even has dreams of being rich
But those cost too much happiness

There are dreams where you can fall in love
That's on his dessert menu if you care to look
It's one of his sweetest treats
Love dreams even comes in sugar free

He takes very seriously the dreams he's sold
Nothing artificial it's all a-la-natural
Next time you're in Central Park stop by and see
Let him make up for you, the perfect dream
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