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Our love for birds is conceptual. Birds are majesty mangled in a biohazard. For us, the trappings of The Church weigh long and heavy While freedom seems easy for the winged diseases. The other night We planned to go out for a wine special at a cafe When we found a pigeon stuck under the hood of the car, Pressed up against the radiator. She screamed and laughed and gripped my arm and said “We have to get it out or it'll fry!” So in the shadow-casting light of our screened-in porch, She strapped a bike helmet to my face like a hockey goalie To protect my eyes from getting pecked out. Oven mitts, a jacket, and pants tucked into my boots. Protections from the bird flu. With my arms stretched out as far as they go, I popped the hood And released the bird And ran back to the porch And she yelped and cackled As it rose up Flapping furiously, free and frantic and faithfully gone into the warmest night we’ve had in months. Just today I encountered her, face to the window: “A cardinal!” Which is a bird (her favorite bird) I only ever see walking on the ground, not flying. Clean, balanced, thoughtful of each step. I could have held it in the cup of my hands, put it right up to my face, and felt no fear at all.
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Jul 18, 2019
Jul 18, 2019 at 10:18 AM UTC
A Poem about Realizing I Didn't Know What Love Was Until Now (and How That Happens Over and Over Again)
Our love for birds is conceptual. Birds are majesty mangled in a biohazard. For us, the trappings of The Church weigh long and heavy While freedom seems easy for the winged diseases. The other night We planned to go out for a wine special at a cafe When we found a pigeon stuck under the hood of the car, Pressed up against the radiator. She screamed and laughed and gripped my arm and said “We have to get it out or it'll fry!” So in the shadow-casting light of our screened-in porch, She strapped a bike helmet to my face like a hockey goalie To protect my eyes from getting pecked out. Oven mitts, a jacket, and pants tucked into my boots. Protections from the bird flu. With my arms stretched out as far as they go, I popped the hood And released the bird And ran back to the porch And she yelped and cackled As it rose up Flapping furiously, free and frantic and faithfully gone into the warmest night we’ve had in months. Just today I encountered her, face to the window: “A cardinal!” Which is a bird (her favorite bird) I only ever see walking on the ground, not flying. Clean, balanced, thoughtful of each step. I could have held it in the cup of my hands, put it right up to my face, and felt no fear at all.
Marriage isn't for everyone, and not everyone should look for the same kind of love. With that said, the experience of partnership keeps getting richer each year.
levibradford
Written by
24/Cisgender Male/Gainesville, FL
Jul 18, 2019
Jul 18, 2019 at 10:18 AM UTC
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