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I used to fall asleep at night thinking about your hair how it looked like trees, chestnuts, branches allocated enough so that I could loop them into braids wide enough to drape like a curtain for eyelids as eyelids are for sockets when thin skin does not hide sun from my pupil’s range. I used to believe I could kiss the very lip of it, smooth and forgiving when I palm some locks out of place: I used to believe no one would bury it with you when you follow your grandfather onto the meniscus of afterlife and I used to believe I’d receive a phone call then a paper bag on our balcony with a note that says: she loved you keep her hair in a vase by the bed so you can sleep again. I used to believe that your roots and leaves could never discover death, rather would twirl and twirl and twirl around tear-ducts like a hedge to disappear the darkness and sponge midsummer’s rain with a honey-colored braid.
0
Mar 31, 2013
Mar 31, 2013 at 4:43 PM UTC
sleep mask
I used to fall asleep at night thinking about your hair how it looked like trees, chestnuts, branches allocated enough so that I could loop them into braids wide enough to drape like a curtain for eyelids as eyelids are for sockets when thin skin does not hide sun from my pupil’s range. I used to believe I could kiss the very lip of it, smooth and forgiving when I palm some locks out of place: I used to believe no one would bury it with you when you follow your grandfather onto the meniscus of afterlife and I used to believe I’d receive a phone call then a paper bag on our balcony with a note that says: she loved you keep her hair in a vase by the bed so you can sleep again. I used to believe that your roots and leaves could never discover death, rather would twirl and twirl and twirl around tear-ducts like a hedge to disappear the darkness and sponge midsummer’s rain with a honey-colored braid.
sarina
Written by
American
Mar 31, 2013
Mar 31, 2013 at 4:43 PM UTC
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