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Isaac Huston Dec 2015
Life is beautiful,
Even in its ******* things.
The small bags of life-
The creases in the paper,
The untying bands of bracelet,
The crinkled edges of the dollar bill,
The thin dark gunk
Collected upon the penny,
The uneven water splashed upon
The bathroom sink,
The droplets upon the toothbrush,
The random foam of the fluoride rinse,
The fraying strands of gray and black
Athletic sock,
The clouded water
Lying below the ivory soap
In its dish-
These are unpleasant, yes,
But they remind us
That we are in this world,
That this is no false world
But a quite real one,
One which we can shape
Or help shape,
One that is worth living in,
Worth loving in,
A good world.
Isaac Huston Dec 2015
It used to be
My limit was whenever
I felt the need to hurt,
The need to feel pain
Not from within,
The need to make blood
Flow down from my skin.
That's when I would call
My friends,
Text them,
Ask for help.

No longer.

Now my limit
Is whenever I want to die,
When I start writing notes,
That's when I grab my phone
And start calling through
The contacts list,
The list of sorrow,
Of the few people left
I can trust,
The ones who won't freak out,
The ones I know
Will take care of me
When I cannot.

But if
That shift
Only took a couple months,
How long will it be
Until it shifts
Again?

How long
Until I have no limit?
How long
Until I try to deal
With those thoughts
On my own as well?
How long
Until I decide not
Not to bother them with
Every little time I feel like
Killing myself?
How long
Will it be until that day?
And what happens
When that day comes?
Will it all end?
Much as I so often want
For that to happen,
I am afraid
That I will make it happen.
I do not want that,
I don't right now.
But soon,
Or at least not too far away,
I will.
And then it will be
Goodnight.
Isaac Huston Nov 2015
Why bother.
It is a pointless folly
To try.
Life has no
Inner meaning,
No hope,
No beauty,
Only pain.
If I want to leave,
There are many ways.
I can jump off of my roof,
Diving head first
To our cement sidewalk.
I can slice open my wrists and
Cut my hamstrings
So that I cannot
Move,
Simply lying there,
Bleeding out.
I can take a full glass,
Enough to get  me drunk,
Then another
Then another
Until I am too far gone,
Destroyed by alcohol,
But mostly by myself.
I could grab some rope,
Like the character in my book,
With all his little details
Based off of me,
Tie it into a noose and
Swing it around the ceiling fan
In my room,
Tying it tight as I
Stand upon my
Woven blue office chair,
Then sticking my neck
Through the hole and
Kicking away the chair,
Kicking away the pain.
I could stab myself,
Only once,
Aiming for my neck,
Hoping to sever the cord
That keeps me alive.
But all of that,
Save maybe the alcohol,
Seems like far too much trouble
To set up.
It’s too hard to
Tie the rope,
Sever the skin,
Or stab in
Through my neck.
Perhaps I could just walk up,
Up to my room,
Up upon my bed,
Rolling open the window,
Crawl out and
Make a small jump out to the roof,
Scrambling to hold on.
Maybe then I’d find
Some glory in the struggle,
Some faint reason to live.
But more likely I’d simply
Cut out the middle man,
Save myself from the pain,
And leap off,
Face-first,
Towards the solid ground.

I want to die,
But without the effort
Of killing myself.
I don’t think
I’ll do something
To end my own life,
But if a car was coming
Straight at me,
At a killing speed,
I don’t think
I’d jump out
Of the way.
Isaac Huston Nov 2015
Alone
In the crowd of people
The bright summer sun
Glints off of their faces,
The dark December clouds
Stay on me.

I know not why I stay
For the little I have left here.
I weep upon the cracked tombstones
Of my inner soul
I mourn for the shattered glass
That reflects my whole.

I feel not shame not regret
And guilt but rarely.
Sorrow seems to fill my soul
My heart is painted
With royal blue
And tainted with depression.

I am just writing here,
Slowly taking space.
No one desires to listen
All who do
Do so from pity.

I feel my friends
Are only there
Purely out of pity.
I **** up their time,
Replace it with mine,
I feel there is nothing worth living.

Upon this hour there are none
No one to wake me
From my sad silent revery
Of obsessed, depressed thought.
The dark is here,
And so am I
And all else
Is but a lie.

I want not sleep,
For I fear the dawn.
Bad as this night is,
That may be worse.
Isaac Huston Nov 2015
Paris
The city of light
Having its darkest night
Since World War Two.

Lebanon
Double the body bags,
Yet no media hags
Turn their heads.

Normal
For there they say
But for Paris nay
And so we pay attention.

Kenya
Syria
Iraq
Libia

A suicide bomb
Over here,
Two hundred dead, we overhear
Wrapped into our daily news.

We pay it
Almost no heed
As the blood drips down to feed
The list of the dead.

We say
It is because we have grown
Accustomed, yet we have flown
Over the Coocoo's best to believe this.

The truth is,
Both for here
And there,
A white life is worth far more.

It is worth
10 Black American lives,
16 Hispanic or Asian lives,
27 Arab lives,
35 African lives,
These numbers
Straight from CNN
And the New York Times.

Do we not bleed the same blood?
Have we forgotten what it is to smile
Such that we cannot see ours are all the same?
What has happened to this world,
Once so gold and bright,
Now a darkened, saddened grey
As it weeps it's tears
Upon the red river
That runs through the valley of fears.
Isaac Huston Nov 2015
It's a sad day
When the sun goes
When the moon dies
And all that lights your world
Is the thin glow of florescents.

The world seems
Upside-down
Read  right-to-left
Gone is all.

A miracle  streams
From behind those monolithic clouds,
A wall of grey,
Slicing with thin wisps of wind,
Sharp against my face,
Stinting my arm,
A red release
That flows down my arm,
Swiveling past
The little hairs,
Ducking and diving
Around the pale skin,
Trickling down
Until the waves come,
A tidal wave
Sweeping the red jerseys
Off of the playing field.

Now
That the clear water
Has gone.

Now
The salted water,
Made quicker to boil,
More bitter than pure vanilla
Or Al Gore in January, 2001.

Now
It falls down,
A slow drip-drop
As the stony walls
Try
To  push it back.
Stone should not cry.
Isaac Huston Nov 2015
Joy
Joy
Is warm apple cider
Drank on a porch
On a cold November day.

Joy
Is a friend
To whom you don't
Have to clarify and censor.

Joy
Is having a moment
To relax
And soak in the world.

Joy
Is having a friend whom talking to
Gives you energy
When you're an introvert.

Joy
Is a quiet read
Outdoors
After a stressful day.

Joy
Is somehow knowing
That everything
Is going to be okay,
And if it isn't,
That no one
Will leave you.

Joy is a slight smile,
A faint contentment
Upon the cheeks and lips,
And a great relaxation
Within.

Joy
Is what I have,
Somehow,
Right now.
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