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On the edge of autumn, I see the sky and trees all ablaze with color. I can still smell the smoldering fires of fierce youth, when the landscape of my heart was wild; a wilderness that wouldn't be tamed. But I'm afraid that old age has quenched my thirst for adventure. Even my poems have lost their teeth. Gone are my scabbed up knees and swords made out of sticks. No beautiful maidens to rescue; Just constipation to overcome; as I listen to the ticking of the clock.
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Mar 5, 2020
Mar 5, 2020 at 10:44 AM UTC
Getting Old
On the edge of autumn, I see the sky and trees all ablaze with color. I can still smell the smoldering fires of fierce youth, when the landscape of my heart was wild; a wilderness that wouldn't be tamed. But I'm afraid that old age has quenched my thirst for adventure. Even my poems have lost their teeth. Gone are my scabbed up knees and swords made out of sticks. No beautiful maidens to rescue; Just constipation to overcome; as I listen to the ticking of the clock.
thomas-w-case
Written by
59/M/Clear Lake
Mar 5, 2020
Mar 5, 2020 at 10:44 AM UTC
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