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8.2k · May 2014
Dreamcatcher
Joe Roberts May 2014
I'm a little disturbed by the implications
of dreamcatchers in cars.
Are we that prone to fall asleep
behind the wheel?
Are we that scared of our nightmares?
If life is a dream
does a person who dies near a dreamcatcher
get caught,
a fly in a web,
in the dreamcatcher and wait to be devoured
by the nightmares inside.
3.3k · Sep 2012
Teapot
Joe Roberts Sep 2012
Impossible, invisible

                  but somehow still nearby.


A teapot in the orbit

                  of a planet
                                                                                                                                                faraway.


Omnipotent (supposedly),

                  but gallingly benign.

As silent as the sky at night

                  and nowhere to be seen.


A speck of dust is planet earth

                  caught in this beam of light

that shines despite the dark of space,
                                                                                                                              beckoning us home.
Just a poem about god.
2.6k · Aug 2012
Rotting tomatoes.
Joe Roberts Aug 2012
Queerly, we eat rotting tomatoes.
You understand, I only pretend a satisfaction.
Dreamers forget that grey heaven is jaded.
**** liars, zealots, and xenoes.
Cultivate virulent brains.
No morality.
Just an exercise that I thought would be interesting. I was right. This turned out a lot more profound than I imagined it would be.
2.3k · Aug 2012
Naked.
Joe Roberts Aug 2012
If the world was mine, we'd all be naked.
No one would wear any clothes.
Just wander about, completely exposed, with nothing to hide and nowhere to hide it.
Clothes are the outward expression of insecurities.
Insecurity is a breed of clothing, a way of cowering and hiding.
If the world was mine, we'd all be secure.
No one would be insecure.
Just wander about, completely exposed, with nothing to hide and nowhere to hide it.
Insecurity is an excuse to justify a lie.
Lies keep us from becoming what we should be, because we lie to ourselves.
If the world was mine, we'd all be honest.
Because we'd be secure and naked.
This might not make sense, but it does to me, and I really like this poem. Also, the titleshould catch a few eyes.
2.2k · Oct 2013
Gunshots.
Joe Roberts Oct 2013
Pop-Pop-Pop-Pop
gunshots.
People take cover
at the capitol.
Unanswered questions.
Why ram
a barricade into
a luxury car?
A brief lock-down
as congress
unsuccessfully tried
to end the shutdown.
Stay away.
Arguably my first political poem, this is a found poem taken from the USA TODAY article, D.C. Incident's Motive a Mystery. Original article written by Kevin Johnson, Donna Leinwand, and Doug Stanglin.
2.2k · Aug 2012
Something new
Joe Roberts Aug 2012
Earnestly convulsing,
because I'm so **** bored.
I've never had a seizure,
but I imagine they're like this.
Leg spasm...
Flailing arm...
Thrashing head...
Bite my tongue...
Against the floor...
Sit up and spit up a *** of blood.
Of course it's not a real seizure.
Just trying something new.
This poem is the second in a four poem series that I am writing. "Something new" is the only poem in this series without a second title, and is actually the first poem that I wrote in the series. I know nothing about seizures, I've never had one. The purpose of this poem isn't to portray a real seizure, it's meant to portray a forced and particularly violent one. Because it is voluntary, a negative experience becomes a form of self destructive recreation.
2.1k · Jun 2012
Origami heart
Joe Roberts Jun 2012
Fold it, like paper,
into whatever.
Unfold it later,
and fold it again.

Today it's a bird,
tomorrow a box,
a flower next week,
whatever you want.

Fold it like paper,
as long as you swear,
that you'll never tear,
my origami heart.
'Origami heart' is a poem about unconditional and subservient love, and a plea that the offered heart will not be broken.
2.0k · Jun 2012
Valleys
Joe Roberts Jun 2012
Mountains and valleys and planes of the mind,
the world in the raw, the home of mankind.

The sea looks so deep from a peak in the sky,
and so full of stars, reflected at night.

Horizons converge and the sky becomes land,
and I climbed the whole world in an effort to stand.

One with the valleys, the mountains, the sea,
and each one a part of the world that is me.
I intended no real message with this poem. It's mostly meant to invoke an image of a man triumphant on a mountain peak, becoming a part of all that he surveys.
2.0k · Dec 2012
Non-Person-Human
Joe Roberts Dec 2012
Sub-human and invisible,
ridiculed and scorned.
Shoved into a corner,
ignored and left alone.

Like an exile or a sickness,
a scrap of human waste.
A human, not a person,
excluded, turned away.

Forgive the melodrama.
1.9k · Nov 2012
Loose pencils
Joe Roberts Nov 2012
The pencils are loose,
they've been set free.
Oh, what a beautiful world it should be,
where the pencils are free,
we can write what we want.
But oh, how abused is this power we've got.
1.5k · Dec 2012
My raging inferiority
Joe Roberts Dec 2012
I believe in a thing called
my raging inferiority.
It's the god that I sacrifice
the best parts of myself too.
In order to attain some solace
and some peace of mind
I pray to my inferiority.
1.4k · Nov 2012
Forget that it's me.
Joe Roberts Nov 2012
Reach into me, scour me for my soul, throw it up against the wall,
**** it.
Powerless, vulnerable, submissive is my soul.
Offering, willingly, hoping it may not hurt. Though it always hurts.
I know I will never escape.
Though achy and sad, I am free in the throes.
I let go of who I am and forget that it's me.
Letting go of myself and my life and my problems and my joy and my pain and my worries and my sorrows and my dreams and my fears and my feelings and my thoughts and my colors and myself and becoming nothing.
I love being nothing.
When I’m nothing I don’t have to be anything ever again.
Lonely nonexistence is my favorite pastime.
1.2k · May 2014
"A Poem" by Toilet
Joe Roberts May 2014
Just once I'd like to ****
into your open mouth.
See how you like the taste
of ****.
1.2k · Dec 2012
Barbed wire
Joe Roberts Dec 2012
I delicately tread barefoot
along this tightrope of barbed wire.
Too painful to go on
to deadly to fall off.
Eventually I will just stand still,
balanced, let my wounds scar over,
graft the wire to my feet.
Become a part of the human race.
1.1k · Jun 2014
God's In the Cacophony
Joe Roberts Jun 2014
Rubber ***** fired,
like grapeshot from cannons,
through a hall of xylophones and
trampolines.
Lemming pianos,
evacuated en masse down
a spiral staircase, piling,
a heap of discordant corpses,
at the foot of the last stair.
The screaming of a star
smeared across space and pasted,
like paint, onto
the smirking invisible face
behind a singularity.
Joe Roberts Aug 2012
Maria likes skyscrapers.
She likes to think of jumping off.
Sometimes she says she's dying.
She closes the door on my face,
but I can still hear her weep.
She says she wants to go back to Nashville
where no one looks like Elvis.
She's tired of the life she lives 'round here.
I know where she's coming from,
because I'm ******* tired too.
Everyone is tired of something.
I think I'll pack my bags and leave,
somewhere in the fog I'll disappear.
If angels are still watching me,
they'll begin to realize that I can no longer tell the difference between right and wrong.
Everything, every lie, every rule I've ever learned has taught me about black and white.
Answers are either right or wrong.
People are either lions or sacrificial lambs.
But it's all beginning to look like white on white to me.
This poem is the third in a four poem series that I am writing. The purpose of this poem was to borrow an idea and a story from the work of another person and write my own poem based on it. This poem is tightly based off of "Round Here" by my favorite band The Counting Crows. I have always wanted to do something like this, and now I've probably done it poorly. Adam Duritz could definitely explain "Round Here" better than I could, but this poem is at least a part of what that song means to me.
1.1k · Oct 2013
Humpty Dumpty Jesus
Joe Roberts Oct 2013
Exalted eggs
sell lent egg salad
to eggshells.
Egg beaters
beat her
for the better
of the better
eggs.
Yokes of the yokel
yolks
choke the yolks
they’re meant to yoke.
Though runny and broken,
run he and broke in.
****** he,
dumped he,
leaving all the eggs
in eggshells.
These saddest fractions,
in shattered
silence, sigh “Let’s
decompose.
Let’s be compost.
Let’s become a flower.”
But on the wind
they twist,
they wind,
they rose.
1.1k · Oct 2013
The Sanctity of Money
Joe Roberts Oct 2013
I, a willing ******
sacrifice to this
deity dreamt up by cavemen
trading shells
for gobs of ******
meat.
In my pocket
I hold paper bearing
sacred holy writ,
and on the internet
somewhere
are hours of my existence
documented in binary
like good deeds
in a seraphic tome
ensuring my someday mansion
in the sky.
Rappers wear the dollar sign
like a gilded golden crucifix
because the wealthy are
the holy men when
Jehovah is money.
If I were to preach
against this theology, become
the antichrist, the anarchist,
throw my cash into a stack
and light that ***** up
I’d be burning myself
at the stake.
Joe Roberts Nov 2013
Permanence
Starlight older than humanity skips and splashes, like a handful of pebbles, into dark puddles behind my eyes. Some of those stars are dead by now, long ago extinguished or exploded. It has taken their fossils thousands of years to reach me here in my backyard. Beside my left eye is a scar that, though it doesn’t have the permanence of light, will be there as long as I’m alive. I often drive by the hospital where I got those stitches. I might die in that hospital someday.

Footprints
One summer I left footprints on a beach in California, then I watched as the sea lifted itself to slap them away. Another summer I tracked mud into the house after playing in a rainstorm. That winter I followed my father out of the house, stepping where he stepped. My father had a telescope. He told me that astronauts had left footprints on the moon where nothing could ever erase them. Those footprints will be there long before I track mud into my mother’s house and stand in my father’s footprints. They will be there long after those of the men who carry me into the ground.
962 · Jul 2014
Bloody Gums
Joe Roberts Jul 2014
A rusty razor blade
embedded in the gap
between your two front teeth.
The sound of wet suction
when you pull the sticky caramel
apple out of your mouth but
the razor blade remains.
A caramel apple, a malevolent oyster
that relinquishes its
browned and jagged
pearl at the small and tempting price of a bite.
959 · Jun 2012
Cannibals
Joe Roberts Jun 2012
The sharks can smell the blood I bleed,
those vultures know I'm here,
the vampires feel the life in me,
the cannibals are near.
This poem is about feeling hunted and having no allies.
933 · Aug 2012
Shred, shove, shoulder.
Joe Roberts Aug 2012
Shred of a man,
shoved into corners,
shouldered through the fight.

Floored by the weight,
of shouldering you,
I shred and I shove you around.

Shoved to the ground,
shred to fragments of a man,
you shoulder your tormented demon.
930 · Jun 2012
Vapor trails.
Joe Roberts Jun 2012
Vapor trails,
the only proof
that you were ever here.

Gone away,
you've gone away,
and now I have regrets.

Goodbye now,
my one true love,
we both knew you would leave.

Someday soon
I'd like to think
that I'll be leaving too.

But for now
I'm looking up
at vapor trails you left.
'Vapor trails' is a poem about death, grieving, and the lingering evidence of a life that's ended.
928 · Mar 2013
Facet drain clock glass
Joe Roberts Mar 2013
Leaky facet,
rusty drain,
and all things driving you insane.

Ticking clock,
some busted glass,
reminders of events gone past.

Fix the facet,
change the drain,
smash the clock,
clean up the glass,
but still go insane.
917 · May 2014
Two Exaltations of One
Joe Roberts May 2014
The rain is falling on our town
and you're out in the rain,
singing at the thunder
and dancing through your pain.
I stay inside to lick my wounds
and sober up in bed.
I play my guitar bitterly
and sing inside instead.
The patter of the rain drops,
the patter of your feet,
the discord at my fingertips,
your chirping in the street.
Larks with hearts like broken wings,
one is you and one is me.
All larks learn to love to sing,
but not all larks are free.
887 · Jun 2012
The shore
Joe Roberts Jun 2012
I see a sea
of ebony,
with aspen trees,
upon the shore.

The waves crash down,
and all around
are evening sounds,
upon the shore.

I'm on the sand,
and at my hand
a castle stands,
upon the shore.

And here I'll lie,
no more to cry,
alone to die,
upon the shore.

When god made you,
he made me too,
and all things true,
upon the shore.
This poem is about loneliness and creation.
872 · Jun 2014
Five Moments
Joe Roberts Jun 2014
Inventing shooting stars
to keep you here and hopeful
while I finagle with my courage
and inch closer to your smile
on a bridge that runs over no river.

The shade and the light,
a yin yang movie theater,
concealing our back-row distractions
under the din and darkness of
a film we're both missing.

Afternoon sunlight chopped up
by the blinds and served
through them, like hors d'oeuvres,
onto our warm bodies
lying together above the covers.

Echoes of our shouting
in the quiet of an impasse that will grow
into a chasm that runs under no bridge
if I reach over and hold you.
Which I always do.

Closing your bedroom door,
aching to turn around and silence your sobbing
that follows me all the way
through your apartment
and out of your future.
865 · Jul 2014
I Understand (I Don't)
Joe Roberts Jul 2014
I'm old enough
to understand,
old man,
what it takes to drag your body out of bed
at one in the morning.
I understand the frustration,
father,
of a cold drive all alone.
I understand the *******,
dad,
of a good job unappreciated.
But I do not yet understand,
daddy,
the fierce sacrifice,
the silent suffering,
the self crucifixion, immolation, flagellation,
of a man who loves his family
more than he loves himself.
761 · Sep 2012
Sexual ache
Joe Roberts Sep 2012
I'd like to think I'm worth a ****,
but then I recall that no one else is.
So I am probably not either.
That's Ok though,
because sometimes life isn't so much pain
as it is a dull and ****** ache.
719 · Sep 2012
Strays (Highschool Halls)
Joe Roberts Sep 2012
Overtly,
the strays sit or stand alone.
Each in a corner,
on a different plane,
solitary and exempt.
Without a home
though a banner reads
"Your home away from home."
What a joke.
684 · Dec 2012
Stupid boy.
Joe Roberts Dec 2012
"Stupid boy" my spirit says,
"that girl was your salvation."
"Too proud to bow your head,
too proud to do what's right.
And now she's gone and we're alone.
You stupid stupid boy."
679 · Dec 2012
Erase
Joe Roberts Dec 2012
I hope erasing me was easy.
I hope I didn't leave a smudge.
I hope your life is nice and clean now
and that your sheet is nice and blank.
650 · May 2014
Penumbra of Defeat
Joe Roberts May 2014
Crushed under the dust
riding thick in the air.
Hands and knees to choke
and cough on a heavy
*** of burning oxygen.
In the valley
where all is a blown out
shade of sepia green,
you're reduced to a mollusk
crawling in your clothing,
clawing at the dirt,
calling, shouting,
eyes defeated,
"Someone turn that ******* light off before I go blind!"
648 · May 2014
Trash Floating
Joe Roberts May 2014
Dear Houston,
does the waterbug
skittering
at the bottom of the pond,
searching
for a meal or a lay,
think that the waterlogged cardboard box
floating
saggy on the surface
is a small planet or a constellation?
Is the plastic grocery bag an Oort Cloud?
When the waterbug rolls
helpless
in underwater currents
that she can't understand, is the
swirling dust, and feathers, and leaves,
a whirling Milky Way
to her?
Is the audible rumbling of the highway the voice of the universe?
640 · Jun 2013
3.14159
Joe Roberts Jun 2013
Scientists in laboratories
     playing with the quark,
accelerating particles
   beyond the speed of light,
searching for the digit
   at the end of things like 3.14159.

Clergymen in tabernacles
   orating ancient prayers,
reading ancient scripture
   to gathered fallen souls,
searching for the deity,
   for Jesus Christ, for God.

Isolated in my room
   with nothing but a notebook
and a restless scribbling pen,
   searching myself for myself.
636 · May 2014
Marooned
Joe Roberts May 2014
A squall out on the high seas,
lightning illuminating the underbellies
of dark and heavy clouds.
The delayed thunder barely reaches my island.
It hasn't rained here in almost four months.
Out, under those clouds
instead of here, under this palm
I could wrap my body in that storm
and feel the lightning lash my back
and caress me in the dark
between the strobes of light.
I could drown beneath the beating waves,
and maybe find a mermaid.
620 · Mar 2013
Humming
Joe Roberts Mar 2013
If hummingbirds could
                sing
would they make a
                      pretty sound?
Or,
like
  nails
   on
    chalkboards
     in
      classrooms
       with
        no
         walls.

If  the    stars    could  keep  you  warm  at  night  would  you  ever  miss  the    Sun  ?
Or    shun    the coming of the dawn in theconfinesof the night.

If I could write a love song do you think you'd like the sound?
612 · Mar 2013
Eggshell
Joe Roberts Mar 2013
Sanity's an eggshell
and all the world wants scrambled eggs.
594 · Jun 2012
Cove
Joe Roberts Jun 2012
Alone in my cove, on my side,
I think thoughts of you, on your side.
The world seems so big,
when I don't take part,
but you, you always take part.

Alone with my thoughts on my side,
I think of the world on your side.
And how it would be,
if I would take part,
but me, I never take part.

Alone in my hole, on my side,
while you take in life on your side.
The life on my side,
is life I impart,
of your world, I need no part.

Desiring you, on my side,
I know you're content on your side.
I would be content,
to give you my heart,
but you have a wandering heart.
Cove is a love poem, but it's about pain. The pain of loving someone who is too frivolous to really love or be loved fully. It's a love without compromise or communication, just the unadulterated and unconditional adoration of someone who comes from a different, more lonely, world.
590 · Aug 2012
To Save my Graceless Ass
Joe Roberts Aug 2012
When I tell you that you are no longer my problem,
I really mean that you are no longer my saving grace.

You were, by far, the best part of being me,
but I wasn't being me when I was with you.

I was letting you save me,
be my saving grace.
And that just wasn't right.

I need to be my own grace.
Otherwise
I'm not worth the grace that it would take
to save my graceless ***.
Some people change you, some people too much. Sometimes you need to let those people out of your life in order to rediscover yourself and become who you were before they "saved" you.
588 · Feb 2014
Science/Souls
Joe Roberts Feb 2014
Science
Bathed in electric impulse, drowning in syrupy endorphins, I breathe a swampy breath through your tangled hair. Your bare feet are pressed against the windshield, toe knuckles white from curling. You slither your tongue around the twisted contours of my ear and I writhe like a primordial amoeba in a cesspool of gene pools. Evolution is a joke.

Souls
Ostensible existence, like life in a dream where someone grabs you by your ears, shouting, “This is real!” before their hands are vapor and they float away. You watch the mist of your assailant and remember that you’re dreaming. You wake up, hopefully next to someone. Someone who holds you by your ears and whispers that she’s real. Someone who’ll evaporate, who you’ll evaporate to follow.
586 · Nov 2012
Permanence
Joe Roberts Nov 2012
I wish I was more permanent,
like a mountain range,
a fossil,
a beam of light.
I'd even settle for the permanence of the words that I say.
When your legacy is fleeting,
as mine is,
you strive for the strength to last,
to be permanent.
586 · Aug 2012
Damn
Joe Roberts Aug 2012
If
you can read this
then
you are looking
way
too close
at something
best ignored.
Please
don't give a ****.
581 · Oct 2012
Box
Joe Roberts Oct 2012
Box
Bullied into a box,
await the pins and needles.
Crammed into asylums,
wait for promised pain.

Tomorrow never comes
when sunlight means salvation.
Yesterday is a myth
with memories of peace.
Joe Roberts May 2014
Someone who looks so happy
in a big sunny field actually could think big,
could have anything, could have
riches, power, anything.
To be stupid, to be happy
in a big sunny field.
Actually, it's hard to argue with that.
Pretend you've got that now.
Could you wish for anything?
If you had a big sunny field to be in,
would you think anything,
riches, power, ANYthing,
actually looks so big
in the big sunny field you've got?
If you know the source that I used for this found poem then you're really **** to me. I'll give you a hint. It's about a tiger that's a sage.
543 · May 2014
Bandwagon [10w]
Joe Roberts May 2014
The horse pulling this bandwagon has been beaten to death.
524 · Jun 2012
Empty rooms
Joe Roberts Jun 2012
Shadows cast by nothing on the walls of empty rooms.
Illuminating aura from the depths of limbo glows.
In the empty corner is a man who isn't there.
Aged sage that thinks of empty rooms.
This one is about the reality and pervasive quality of nothing, of emptiness. It's short and a little nonsensical, but I really like it.
509 · Apr 2013
Flying Apart
Joe Roberts Apr 2013
This whole thing is
flying apart
and I can hear it
scream.
505 · Sep 2012
What I lack
Joe Roberts Sep 2012
Incomplete,
thus bearing definition,
I love the things I lack.
My shortcomings,
my defects,
my missing parts,
what I lack separates
and helps me transcend
mere humanity.
What I lack makes me whole.
What I lack,
not what I have,
is who I am.
I say never be complete, I say stop being perfect. - Tyler Durden, Fight Club
503 · Jun 2012
Lullaby dirge.
Joe Roberts Jun 2012
Take from me this fragile cup,
and then for me, please smash it up.
And
take from me these shattered dreams,
because the night's not what it seems.
And
while you're crying, in the hall,
I'll take hammers to these walls.
And
while you're treading through the glass,
I'll remember time gone past.
And
find for me a coat and tie.
I'll sing for you a lullaby.
And
I will sing you off to sleep,
then I'll go swimming in the deep.
And
try for me, to just forget
the first time that we ever met.
For
now I'm gone, I won't back,
and now for me you'll dress in black.
Another of my earliest works, 'Lullaby dirge' is a message of comfort from a recently deceased individual to a lover that he is leaving behind. It's a promise that he will never be far and will remain with her in spirit, attempting to comfort her and linger, but it also states the finality of the situation and that the living should not cling to what has transpired between them.
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