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Erika Gibson Apr 15
The 8th floor isn’t the tallest; it’s just the floor my hotel room was on. It would be a good enough height to **** me and I’d have enough time to think on my way down. It was a pretty hotel with a large area downstairs that had fountains and lounge chairs, but what really caught my eye was the beautiful light fixture overhead. It was huge and hung down from the ceiling, it had all these little transparent glass leaf-like pieces on it, and all the pieces came together to make a cloud. The leaves were suspended on strings and they moved up and down slowly. The motion was kind of like one a whale would make when swimming through the sea. There were these big lights that were level with the structure that made all the leaves light up with a kind of bluish-purple. The hotel rooms were above the lounge area in rows stacked on top of each other. Looking down from the eighth floor I could see business people coming and going, coming and going. I wondered if I should take a shower and put on my best clothes before I do it, but I decided against it. I was ready.

As I climbed over the railing into the edge of fake potted plants I thought to myself “What a beautiful place to die.” I wondered who would witness my plunge and what they would think of me. I wondered if anyone would try to come to my rescue or if they would just scrape me off the floor and put me in a bag. I wondered what would happen if I didn’t die, if I had to live with myself after this. I would have to jump gracefully. When I started to fall I thought about my mom and dad. I am five hours away from them, but maybe that’s a good thing. My parents wouldn’t have to see my mangled body lying on the floor of the Hilton. I am the oldest of four siblings—I wondered if kids from their school would find out that their sister threw herself off the eighth floor of the Hilton.

My long hair flew upwards as I fell; I wanted to cut it, but I never got the chance. My body fell directly in front of those big lights which illuminated that big whale in the sky. It made me look like a shadow against the blue and purple. I wondered who would have to clean up my body and what I would look like. Would there be a ****** mess? Would my body look twisted because of the broken bones? Would my eyes be open or closed? What noise does a body make when it hits tile from the eighth floor? At this point I realized that I was afraid to die. The eighth floor was out of sight now and my body was falling fast. I threw myself off the eighth floor of the Hilton because I was hoping that death would make sense. Life is complicated, and stressful, and hard, but death would be easy right? The view from here is beautiful, and I realize it's too late for me. It’s too late for me to have a change of heart, it's too late for me to keep on living, it’s too late. Maybe this decision was made too early.

I hope I’m falling gracefully. I hope that this doesn't hurt. I hope that my death is more significant than my life. I hope that I am not reduced to a conversation at a family’s dinner table. I hope that whatever comes after this gives me closure. I hope it's nothing. I hope darkness surrounds me and I can sleep. I wish I had written something to explain myself but it's too late and life is too much. I don’t even know what my last words were, my last meal, my last time waking up, my last time falling asleep, my last time laughing, my last tear. I wasn’t crying when I jumped. I am getting close to the floor now, but I’m not ready. I’m not ready to die, but my vision goes black as I hit the pretty, marbled, shiny, white tile.
Mar 4 · 105
Mourning Doves
Erika Gibson Mar 4
There is a hint of warmth back in the air,
And the mourning doves are back to mourn me,
Cooing their familiar song
Because every spring they return
They no longer recognize me.
The gray-feathered birds eat seeds in the yard
And perch on rooftops and tree branches
To cry out in sorrow.
They cry because another version of me is dead.
Feb 22 · 21
Hostess
Erika Gibson Feb 22
The doors of the restaurant squeak open.
Behind the host counter I watch people pour in.

Tired parents with a screaming baby,
An awkward couple on a first date,
Two U.S. marines in full uniform,
An angry mom and her family of five,
A couple accompanied by a service dog,
An older man who asks for a table for one,
A woman who tells me I remind her of her daughter,
A college girl who waits for her friends for an hour,
A family who stay on their phones while they eat,
A food delivery man who is in a rush,
A drunken man who asks to sit in the bar,
Three old women who seat themselves,
Six girls who ask me to take a photo of them,
A woman wearing nurse scrubs,
A little girl who asks for an extra coloring page,
And a family of twenty.

I’m just a poet with a part time job.
Feb 22 · 298
Lavender Bubbles
Erika Gibson Feb 22
Lavender bubbles that float in lavender baths.
Lavender bubbles that slither and writhe in lavender water.
Lavender bubbles that wrap their tails around lavender limbs.
Lavender bubbles that pull you under lavender waves.
Lavender bubbles that sink in their lavender fangs.
Lavender bubbles that fill your lungs with lavender venom.


Lavender bubbles that deceive in lavender ways.
Feb 22 · 16
Resurrection
Erika Gibson Feb 22
Osiris, give new life to what we once thought was dead.
The death and rebirth of a year,
A triquetra,
An unbreakable cycle.

Osiris, resurrect the old year.
Like the notorious lotus flower
As it rises out of the dark waters at the start of each day.
Like the yellow daffodils that bloom in the spring.
Winter is over.

Osiris, restore the old year.
Improve and develop it.
Annually it waits for the next samsara
Like the sunflower,
As it longingly reaches towards the light.

Osiris, revive the old year.
Make it fresh and new
Like the white rose,
For it represents new beginnings.
Peace has returned.

— The End —