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I can't count the number of times, the wind stopped me in my tracks. The length of night that stretched out of my heart. The number of times, I could not say goodbye. I counted on so many things to signal your return. Each time, the signs dwindled down, to what they are today. It was never, the way you described; I found out, unintentionally. You'd call on a whim, And miraculously, I'd be there. Like the worn down music-box my grandmother kept. My motor was wound, and I laid, Always ready. Even if I were blind, I'd know you from the gentler notes. The rate of your breath, the sound of your voice, the scent of your hair... I didn't have the heart, to stay far enough away. I wasn't a slave, But, I couldn't call this freedom. I was a poet, with a few words, and a jar full of tears. I'd carry them to town: every morning negotiating a fair price, to those who'd pay. They'd pay me in flowers, in kisses, and large bellowing laughs. But my pockets were empty, my lips parched, my voice hoarse. But I did have a smile. It spread from cheek to cheek. My eyes would receive the light, and transpose it into something else. Faces molded by a Gutenberg Press. Antiquarian, but lovely either way. After a day or so, the ink would fade at an alarming rate. Once red lips, now chapped and anguished. Their arms, could not hold me. I was already, very far away. Now, I watched as tears fell, from eyes that weren't my own. I watched, and felt a pain in my stomach. Not the gut turning pain of guilt. I was hungry! But my pockets were still empty. I spent it all (out of concern for my health), on a fake smile and an empty glass. But don't think it was all that sudden. I was cold, I was alone, and I was drifting through a town I didn't know. I went back and forth with the angel in my heart, and the devil in my ***** for a whole 30 seconds, accepting the shame I knew you wouldn't feel. Now, now, I know what you're thinking. This story deteriorated into one about me. But it hasn't. It's still about you. 100%. So, I'm sure, one day, you'll read this letter. You'll file it away with all the postcards I sent. Maybe even loosely bind it in a folder, held together with rubber bands, stables and tape. Not with the notation "beautiful poems," nor "inspiring messages," and definitely not "everlasting love." You'll put a post-it note on top, and label it "Deranged, Obsessive Ramblings." It'll float around, bouncing in between the chasm of your perfectly sculpted head, till one day you realize: "It couldn't be about 'Him'." You see, my life had none of the adornments I mentioned. It had no flowers, no kisses, and assuredly, no bellowing laughs. But I can say, I was really, quite hungry. The End.
0
Dec 11, 2017
Dec 11, 2017 at 3:12 AM UTC
September 17th
I can't count the number of times, the wind stopped me in my tracks. The length of night that stretched out of my heart. The number of times, I could not say goodbye. I counted on so many things to signal your return. Each time, the signs dwindled down, to what they are today. It was never, the way you described; I found out, unintentionally. You'd call on a whim, And miraculously, I'd be there. Like the worn down music-box my grandmother kept. My motor was wound, and I laid, Always ready. Even if I were blind, I'd know you from the gentler notes. The rate of your breath, the sound of your voice, the scent of your hair... I didn't have the heart, to stay far enough away. I wasn't a slave, But, I couldn't call this freedom. I was a poet, with a few words, and a jar full of tears. I'd carry them to town: every morning negotiating a fair price, to those who'd pay. They'd pay me in flowers, in kisses, and large bellowing laughs. But my pockets were empty, my lips parched, my voice hoarse. But I did have a smile. It spread from cheek to cheek. My eyes would receive the light, and transpose it into something else. Faces molded by a Gutenberg Press. Antiquarian, but lovely either way. After a day or so, the ink would fade at an alarming rate. Once red lips, now chapped and anguished. Their arms, could not hold me. I was already, very far away. Now, I watched as tears fell, from eyes that weren't my own. I watched, and felt a pain in my stomach. Not the gut turning pain of guilt. I was hungry! But my pockets were still empty. I spent it all (out of concern for my health), on a fake smile and an empty glass. But don't think it was all that sudden. I was cold, I was alone, and I was drifting through a town I didn't know. I went back and forth with the angel in my heart, and the devil in my ***** for a whole 30 seconds, accepting the shame I knew you wouldn't feel. Now, now, I know what you're thinking. This story deteriorated into one about me. But it hasn't. It's still about you. 100%. So, I'm sure, one day, you'll read this letter. You'll file it away with all the postcards I sent. Maybe even loosely bind it in a folder, held together with rubber bands, stables and tape. Not with the notation "beautiful poems," nor "inspiring messages," and definitely not "everlasting love." You'll put a post-it note on top, and label it "Deranged, Obsessive Ramblings." It'll float around, bouncing in between the chasm of your perfectly sculpted head, till one day you realize: "It couldn't be about 'Him'." You see, my life had none of the adornments I mentioned. It had no flowers, no kisses, and assuredly, no bellowing laughs. But I can say, I was really, quite hungry. The End.
lolimeister16
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Dec 11, 2017
Dec 11, 2017 at 3:12 AM UTC
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