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We are rain, we are tears; we're the condensation on your beer mug. And we form, and fall, and feel forgotten some times. From heaven, to earth, and back again, we take trillions of tiny journeys— assemble in sheets, hover in mists/ trickle, splatter, pelt without mercy/ quietly collect and freeze/ loud as the sea, softer than the whisper of death—easy to deflect and shatter, with power to carve canyons. From shoulders we vault to elbows, dance down arms, scurry between legs, squish between toes, hurry down the drain linger on linoleum when you pad away from the shower, trailing steam down a sweaty hallway— to where he lays motionless, breathing sunny solstice dust in a closet-sized room. “Better”? “Oh, much.  And thanks for the towel, too”.                                                                            II. Everything about you was flat. I knew your hair was blonde but also something else— not dishwater or ***** or even unclean— “flat” was the only word that fit. Flat as your face, your chest, the bottoms of your shoes, and not a whole lot less scarred. Flat as your eyes— such eyes as I’d never seen; not always awake— hunting/wanting/sharp like a scavenger’s yet full of blind spots, placed there by the drug to impede self-perception— and wantonly green. I knew only your name. You hung with Jim, haunting Mother’s— just two junkies bumming change. I was amazed you managed to survive. House rule was never trust a ****** but home alone, in too much pain to care, I let you take a shower, borrow my towel. We compared spinal surgeries; vinyl siding on childhood homes; monsters and movies; fruits we didn’t like; a nod to new music/ put on your red shoes and dance the blues then places we’d go when our ship came in; the greasiness of the sun outside; the final indignity of death— anything but our lives just then. From summer cotton to suddenly nothing— no memory of how or why. You spurned my offer of a cigarette after with a gesture so shy and self-conscious I felt myself growing suspicious—then alarmed, confused, and finally, amused at my own lack of observation. You weren’t hiding anything. You just didn’t want me to see you as begging.
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Dec 19, 2011
Dec 19, 2011 at 6:53 PM UTC
Suzy — [A Suite]
We are rain, we are tears; we're the condensation on your beer mug. And we form, and fall, and feel forgotten some times. From heaven, to earth, and back again, we take trillions of tiny journeys— assemble in sheets, hover in mists/ trickle, splatter, pelt without mercy/ quietly collect and freeze/ loud as the sea, softer than the whisper of death—easy to deflect and shatter, with power to carve canyons. From shoulders we vault to elbows, dance down arms, scurry between legs, squish between toes, hurry down the drain linger on linoleum when you pad away from the shower, trailing steam down a sweaty hallway— to where he lays motionless, breathing sunny solstice dust in a closet-sized room. “Better”? “Oh, much.  And thanks for the towel, too”.                                                                            II. Everything about you was flat. I knew your hair was blonde but also something else— not dishwater or ***** or even unclean— “flat” was the only word that fit. Flat as your face, your chest, the bottoms of your shoes, and not a whole lot less scarred. Flat as your eyes— such eyes as I’d never seen; not always awake— hunting/wanting/sharp like a scavenger’s yet full of blind spots, placed there by the drug to impede self-perception— and wantonly green. I knew only your name. You hung with Jim, haunting Mother’s— just two junkies bumming change. I was amazed you managed to survive. House rule was never trust a ****** but home alone, in too much pain to care, I let you take a shower, borrow my towel. We compared spinal surgeries; vinyl siding on childhood homes; monsters and movies; fruits we didn’t like; a nod to new music/ put on your red shoes and dance the blues then places we’d go when our ship came in; the greasiness of the sun outside; the final indignity of death— anything but our lives just then. From summer cotton to suddenly nothing— no memory of how or why. You spurned my offer of a cigarette after with a gesture so shy and self-conscious I felt myself growing suspicious—then alarmed, confused, and finally, amused at my own lack of observation. You weren’t hiding anything. You just didn’t want me to see you as begging.
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Dec 19, 2011
Dec 19, 2011 at 6:53 PM UTC
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