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A time zone separation of 3 hours, in reality, is nearly impossible. When the soft sun is lifting your eyes in morning, I’ve already been up. When I’m sleeping, you’re still perched brightly on the cheek of the night sky, etching love letters into its velvet. I wish there was a way to yank back the clock’s hands, peel at the skin of its fingertips so we could live in a single minute together, counting the music of seconds, like blood rushing through our entwined arteries. There was a time when we sat on a dusky mountain face and watched the moon rise. You told me to find the comfort in the fact that it’s always the same moon no matter the distance. Last night, the sky was too dark to tell. Maybe there will come a day when you’re not in L.A. and I’m sick of New York and we reconvene in Paris, or Tokyo, or maybe, a small meadow, as the grass dances red in the sun’s final hours, where time is antiquated and we measure the passing of days with the songs of sparrows. Until then, we’ll send our love through telephone wires and call it even if it takes me 2 weeks to get back to you.
0
Apr 13, 2016
Apr 13, 2016 at 7:08 PM UTC
3 Missed Calls From Emma, or The Fidelity of Distance
A time zone separation of 3 hours, in reality, is nearly impossible. When the soft sun is lifting your eyes in morning, I’ve already been up. When I’m sleeping, you’re still perched brightly on the cheek of the night sky, etching love letters into its velvet. I wish there was a way to yank back the clock’s hands, peel at the skin of its fingertips so we could live in a single minute together, counting the music of seconds, like blood rushing through our entwined arteries. There was a time when we sat on a dusky mountain face and watched the moon rise. You told me to find the comfort in the fact that it’s always the same moon no matter the distance. Last night, the sky was too dark to tell. Maybe there will come a day when you’re not in L.A. and I’m sick of New York and we reconvene in Paris, or Tokyo, or maybe, a small meadow, as the grass dances red in the sun’s final hours, where time is antiquated and we measure the passing of days with the songs of sparrows. Until then, we’ll send our love through telephone wires and call it even if it takes me 2 weeks to get back to you.
poethands
Written by
Chicago
Apr 13, 2016
Apr 13, 2016 at 7:08 PM UTC
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