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Consciousness, mindfulness, philosophical enlightenment - Live for the **** of it. Camus was right to breathe in spite of the tide of crushing emptiness. The boulder gets heavy, the bones grow weary, the mountain is steep and we are steeped in irony. For life can be deadly and death's rows of gravestones mark homes for freed slaves, their crossed arms hiding scars left by the teeth of nihilistic grief beatings and surgery scalpels set to carve by frequent false alarms. Sisyphus took but one break, to hear the chains rattled from the gates, hellish obsidian, vermilion flames licking lumps of silica grains mixed with ash and a black tar splash. And Orpheus sighed on the lyre and brought tears to the eyes of the most vile, while Sisyphus paused - not long, but a lifetime for those still free to subside to dust, from blood and guts, when their time arrives. The trials of life, the striving rites and lavish gifts of light to defy the black and empty dusk still fail. Eurydice grows pale as Orpheus turns to see her cheeks losing every trace of peach hue, eyes emptying, lungs leaking their last gale. Struggling again, Sisyphus is sent tumbling down the face of the great mountain, grabbing gravel and sand and gashing gaps in his hard leather hands. Bleeding ash, not blood, hot red mud dripping from the thick lacerations, mixing with the sickening avalanche of wasted effort and waylaid plans. Repeating the climb up the steep peak, bones creaking like a clock's gears, rattling off the seconds, minutes, hours, years until the watch stops its panicked hands. Until then we will toil unswayed as we wear stones to clay, carving winding paths in spirals up the mountain's waist. No calm for those with breath, no rest for beating hearts. We must live in spite of life, and then sink silent to the earth.
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Oct 28, 2013
Oct 28, 2013 at 5:33 AM UTC
Myth of Sisyphus
Consciousness, mindfulness, philosophical enlightenment - Live for the **** of it. Camus was right to breathe in spite of the tide of crushing emptiness. The boulder gets heavy, the bones grow weary, the mountain is steep and we are steeped in irony. For life can be deadly and death's rows of gravestones mark homes for freed slaves, their crossed arms hiding scars left by the teeth of nihilistic grief beatings and surgery scalpels set to carve by frequent false alarms. Sisyphus took but one break, to hear the chains rattled from the gates, hellish obsidian, vermilion flames licking lumps of silica grains mixed with ash and a black tar splash. And Orpheus sighed on the lyre and brought tears to the eyes of the most vile, while Sisyphus paused - not long, but a lifetime for those still free to subside to dust, from blood and guts, when their time arrives. The trials of life, the striving rites and lavish gifts of light to defy the black and empty dusk still fail. Eurydice grows pale as Orpheus turns to see her cheeks losing every trace of peach hue, eyes emptying, lungs leaking their last gale. Struggling again, Sisyphus is sent tumbling down the face of the great mountain, grabbing gravel and sand and gashing gaps in his hard leather hands. Bleeding ash, not blood, hot red mud dripping from the thick lacerations, mixing with the sickening avalanche of wasted effort and waylaid plans. Repeating the climb up the steep peak, bones creaking like a clock's gears, rattling off the seconds, minutes, hours, years until the watch stops its panicked hands. Until then we will toil unswayed as we wear stones to clay, carving winding paths in spirals up the mountain's waist. No calm for those with breath, no rest for beating hearts. We must live in spite of life, and then sink silent to the earth.
casper-j
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Oct 28, 2013
Oct 28, 2013 at 5:33 AM UTC
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