Hello Poetry
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Hello, old friend, whose semi-permanent smile laces my vision like toxic ranks of pearly whites. Hello, old friend, whose sparkling eyes blaze like the funeral pyre of my pride and prejudice. Hello, old friend, whose apparent ineptitude melts like happiness as your name burns in black on that page. You signed my yearbook like a death certificate, wrote an affectionate note in the shape of nothing worth knowing. The lines bleed, multiply, crackle and shine in the dull light of this most tiring expanse of computers. Their brains function better than mine. Hello, old friend, whose pen now swirls across the work you were assigned, work you pursue less like a lion and more like a cougar, if you get my message. (There’s no taking the jungle out of you, Amazon.) Hello, old friend. Keep snapping pictures with your iPhone, like it’s New Years and you just kissed DiCaprio in Times Square, wearing a dress with all the greens of envy splattered across the fabric. Hello, old friend. Keep telling me you hate it when I act like this, when your eyes turn to four points and your skin to letters from colleges begging like a forgotten lover for you to take them and make them home. The home you’re leaving for next month. Hello, old friend. Today is now solemn in so many new ways. You achieved higher than the skyscrapers in the photograph next to your eight-line submission. Hello, old friend. No. Revision time. Revision like the backspace key and the scribbled lines over inadequate things I wrote to try and climb your Olympian pedestal. Revision like the eraser on the pen, revision like the keys thumping as though this machine had a heart, as though mine wasn’t broken because I’m never good enough for anybody. I write my best poetry when I’m angry. Ironic that poetry made me angry. I can taste the paradox spinning like the clock hands that tick, tick, tick until the day when you sit in a car on top of a thousand suitcases and a few well-wishes from your confederates in college. I can taste it like a toxin. And now, now you’re going and there’s only time to say: good-bye, old friend.
0
May 29, 2013
May 29, 2013 at 2:01 PM UTC
One Honest Moment On Being Rejected For Everything
Hello, old friend, whose semi-permanent smile laces my vision like toxic ranks of pearly whites. Hello, old friend, whose sparkling eyes blaze like the funeral pyre of my pride and prejudice. Hello, old friend, whose apparent ineptitude melts like happiness as your name burns in black on that page. You signed my yearbook like a death certificate, wrote an affectionate note in the shape of nothing worth knowing. The lines bleed, multiply, crackle and shine in the dull light of this most tiring expanse of computers. Their brains function better than mine. Hello, old friend, whose pen now swirls across the work you were assigned, work you pursue less like a lion and more like a cougar, if you get my message. (There’s no taking the jungle out of you, Amazon.) Hello, old friend. Keep snapping pictures with your iPhone, like it’s New Years and you just kissed DiCaprio in Times Square, wearing a dress with all the greens of envy splattered across the fabric. Hello, old friend. Keep telling me you hate it when I act like this, when your eyes turn to four points and your skin to letters from colleges begging like a forgotten lover for you to take them and make them home. The home you’re leaving for next month. Hello, old friend. Today is now solemn in so many new ways. You achieved higher than the skyscrapers in the photograph next to your eight-line submission. Hello, old friend. No. Revision time. Revision like the backspace key and the scribbled lines over inadequate things I wrote to try and climb your Olympian pedestal. Revision like the eraser on the pen, revision like the keys thumping as though this machine had a heart, as though mine wasn’t broken because I’m never good enough for anybody. I write my best poetry when I’m angry. Ironic that poetry made me angry. I can taste the paradox spinning like the clock hands that tick, tick, tick until the day when you sit in a car on top of a thousand suitcases and a few well-wishes from your confederates in college. I can taste it like a toxin. And now, now you’re going and there’s only time to say: good-bye, old friend.
brendan-watch
Written by
May 29, 2013
May 29, 2013 at 2:01 PM UTC
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