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When I was 17 I watched a man **** himself, I remember the morning like it was yesterday, the air bit at my heels and it was too cold to be at the skatepark, there was a lounge area of weathered tables and pine trees about 50 yards north, I still remember the look in his eyes confusion filled mine, he was old, around 70 and I kept skating around, he just sat there with saltwater in his veins, holding a long barrelled 30-30 it looked like, I kept skating and fixating my eyes on what he was holding, it manipulated my vision, reached out to hopeful ignorance and yanked it through my throat, we never made eye contact, his eyes were buried down a steel thief, I kept rolling back and forth, and I never knew thunder had the ability rip the bearings from the wheels, the crack turned the bark on the tree behind him to a yelp, and I’ve never saw blood fly until that point, I still remember how fast it turned from a picnic table to a crime scene, how aimlessly the yellow tape flew in the wind, as if nothing ever happened, time forged a signature on a death note to man who never felt the chill bite at his heels that day, that barrel screaming for forgiveness knocked at a door with perspective standing at the peephole, I saw myself in his shoes when I saw the life leave his body, I went back that day and saw the city worker spraying the pavement, running an eraser over the pen-painted picture in my mind, the chill shattered my porcelain heels that day and shooed me away from the griptape forever.
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Jun 15, 2016
Jun 15, 2016 at 2:27 AM UTC
The Day I Quit Skating
When I was 17 I watched a man **** himself, I remember the morning like it was yesterday, the air bit at my heels and it was too cold to be at the skatepark, there was a lounge area of weathered tables and pine trees about 50 yards north, I still remember the look in his eyes confusion filled mine, he was old, around 70 and I kept skating around, he just sat there with saltwater in his veins, holding a long barrelled 30-30 it looked like, I kept skating and fixating my eyes on what he was holding, it manipulated my vision, reached out to hopeful ignorance and yanked it through my throat, we never made eye contact, his eyes were buried down a steel thief, I kept rolling back and forth, and I never knew thunder had the ability rip the bearings from the wheels, the crack turned the bark on the tree behind him to a yelp, and I’ve never saw blood fly until that point, I still remember how fast it turned from a picnic table to a crime scene, how aimlessly the yellow tape flew in the wind, as if nothing ever happened, time forged a signature on a death note to man who never felt the chill bite at his heels that day, that barrel screaming for forgiveness knocked at a door with perspective standing at the peephole, I saw myself in his shoes when I saw the life leave his body, I went back that day and saw the city worker spraying the pavement, running an eraser over the pen-painted picture in my mind, the chill shattered my porcelain heels that day and shooed me away from the griptape forever.
Up until this day, 2 people know about what I saw that day.
MitchNihilist
Written by
Jun 15, 2016
Jun 15, 2016 at 2:27 AM UTC
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