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Sometimes the way I see contentment isn’t a vast plain of rolling hills with no peaks and sweet abandon all there at once. Sometimes for me it comes in pieces that are sharp around the edges. I have to hold them a certain way and then I get to feel the smoothness of the moment as my thoughtful nerves relax a little. Sometimes if I have enough of them to fit together there’s enough room for something to grow. Like hope, or a fantasy, a mild happiness. I section each thing off so that it neither reproduces nor withers returning to them when everything gets cold. Sometimes I go back to those pieces and the detached state leaves me confused as to why it meant so much when I found it. I stumble over them, they break, I don’t think of them for a while. Sometimes the new pieces I find would go great with the old if only I had the right parts of each to make another bed to grow some emotion out of. And sometimes, I don’t bother with any of it. Eventually it hits me, that each piece is fine for a moment Although, I have not the skill to make my own vast plain out of broken shards nor the expertise to know just how sharp/fragile each one is before I grab it. So they come and go. But no matter where they are around me they are impossible to dismiss entirely.
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Oct 18, 2015
Oct 18, 2015 at 8:02 PM UTC
Contentmental Gardening
Sometimes the way I see contentment isn’t a vast plain of rolling hills with no peaks and sweet abandon all there at once. Sometimes for me it comes in pieces that are sharp around the edges. I have to hold them a certain way and then I get to feel the smoothness of the moment as my thoughtful nerves relax a little. Sometimes if I have enough of them to fit together there’s enough room for something to grow. Like hope, or a fantasy, a mild happiness. I section each thing off so that it neither reproduces nor withers returning to them when everything gets cold. Sometimes I go back to those pieces and the detached state leaves me confused as to why it meant so much when I found it. I stumble over them, they break, I don’t think of them for a while. Sometimes the new pieces I find would go great with the old if only I had the right parts of each to make another bed to grow some emotion out of. And sometimes, I don’t bother with any of it. Eventually it hits me, that each piece is fine for a moment Although, I have not the skill to make my own vast plain out of broken shards nor the expertise to know just how sharp/fragile each one is before I grab it. So they come and go. But no matter where they are around me they are impossible to dismiss entirely.
lastuxedo
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Oct 18, 2015
Oct 18, 2015 at 8:02 PM UTC
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