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I love how the world glows yellow
in the early morning light.
The birds sing their songs,
and life begins to stir.

Moments before,
at the edge of darkness,
there is a deep stillness
and a beautiful eerie silence.

Moments after,
the world explodes in orange light.
The morning light changes so
brilliantly and quickly,
and just like that it's gone.
199

I’m “wife”—I’ve finished that—
That other state—
I’m Czar—I’m “Woman” now—
It’s safer so—

How odd the Girl’s life looks
Behind this soft Eclipse—
I think that Earth feels so
To folks in Heaven—now—

This being comfort—then
That other kind—was pain—
But why compare?
I’m “Wife”! Stop there!
 Mar 2014 Olivia Mercado
MB
Dearest Mr. Green,
It was an honor to have my heart broken by you. Your book, The Fault in Our Stars was one of the best recommendations I may have ever crossed. I thank you deeply for all the hours of pure giddiness and tortuous pain that you created in both Hazel Grace and Augustus Waters. However, I do have many questions about Hazel's future: does she ever loose her battle to her cancer? What happened to Augustus's parents soon after the loss of their son set into reality?

Your story honestly had my heart ripping slowly into pieces, the way you described how Hazel Grace and Augustus had crossed paths and went down a beautiful road into the hearts of all your readers... gave me the deepest appreciation of the young fighters of childhood cancers.

As a daughter of a cancer survivor, I've had my fair shares of visiting support groups with my mother while she was going through her treatments. I remember the panic I felt every time she went in for PET scans and Chemo, worrying for any ounce of her body to betray her. Thank you for making the pain and worry of cancer so beautifully worded, and the uncertainty of how quickly cancer can easily take the happiness away from someone.  
Thank you for the hopes given to me when you wrote the heartfelt words, “Some infinities are bigger than other infinities.”

You are truly an incredible soul with a heartbreaking habit of writing books with main characters who tend to die of some serious form of illness. I find you to be both evil yet so perfect when it comes to your stories. You are my inspiration. However, I am slightly upset that AIA is not a real book. It would be quiet a wonderful rollercoaster to ride.

“Sometimes, you read a book and it fills you with this weird evangelical zeal, and you become convinced that the shattered world will never be put back together unless and until all living humans read the book. And then there are books like An Imperial Affliction, which you can't tell people about, books so special and rare and yours that advertising your affection feels like betrayal”  Yours, could not have put my thoughts onto paper in any more of a perfected way.

Yesterday, you gained a new fan. I adore you as an author and person. I really do.

Sincerely,
m.b
July 11, 2013- I have yet to hear a reply...
That’s the thing about pain;
it demands to be felt.
John Green taught me that,
on a cold November night,
with the moon high and bright,
the wind rapping at my frail,
poorly built windows,
sending an unbearable,
uneasy chill throughout my room.

Nothing torments me more,
than having to toss you away,
dispose of your remnants,
to wash and scrub the mere
fragrance of your soul,
from this interior,
made of creaking,
wooden floorboards
and flimsy painted walls
that people like to call,
a home.

I suppose it’s time again—
to be alone.
Just when I’d gotten used to
being intertwined with someone’s soul,
my very essence being painted
with your once existing love.

But the loneliness,
it seems to have rendered
my happiness more likely.
It helps me to enjoy the finer,
simpler things.

I find a little peace
in the death of plants
when Autumn has come around.
The trees change so drastically,
their leaves vibrant reds and yellows,
until they descend onto the ground,
decaying, renewing the soil that
provides nutrients for that same tree.
The thing is, is that they are changed.
They’re changed by inexorable forces,
but they continue to move on,
becoming the ultimate masters of
letting go.

On a summer night,
right after a thunderstorm,
the way the mist causes my hair to frizz,
the way the wind blows through my hair,
it reminds of a new start, a new beginning.
It reminds of a promised day of happiness.

Nothing soothes my soul more
than the sound of perfectly tuned
guitar strings being strummed,
and then fading into nothingness.
But the thing that pains me most
is it’s nothingness reminding me
of the silence once shared
between our kisses.

That’s the thing about it,
the pain demands to be felt.
No matter how hard I try
to write off these feelings I harbor,
they remain,
and I’m never able to stop—
to stop writing about you.
want  to write better, most of my writes are about heartbreak or love, i want to write something more daring, about her
This moonlight bathes this cold but
Thawing state in cool blue light

Kind of like

How I was bathed in the glow of
Your smile and the smell of your skin
 Mar 2014 Olivia Mercado
kris wu
i draw a treasure map on my chest
putting the X right over my heart
because that's where everything is buried
and where the true wealth lies
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