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There's this light, really hollow expanse in my chest and it fills with electric stars, each blinking rapidly. I'll wear my jumper, loose bottoms and socks and I am engulfed by a sharp breeze, fleeing in through our open back door. I know that smell. It's cold and fluttering and full of purpose. And it pats my face as I breath it in. I think how easy it could be, and would have been, way in the past to believe in Gods and who prove their power by rylling up the weather. Blowing in a storm. All thunderstorms smell the same, wherever you are. And they each speak in heavy voices, rattling low. I suppose it's on you to look inside at your grievances unpaid to them. But I simply love the change. The power in the sky that strikes and rumbles, and the waiting, oh the waiting... As the clouds openly fuse and grind darker, the smell of the thunder growing thicker and bounding about. It's like a miracle how fast it happens, how much energy it feeds to everything. Time that was the insect looking at us, we are obnoxiously slow. Is now us looking at the insect, who is amazingly fast. Until... There's a moment when that energy reaches its capacity, the sky squeezing. And you wait Dddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd The rain is unleashed. And sound everywhere explodes! Cause it's heavy and it's coming fast. Hopping back to the door, I sit just inside its frame my face stretching with glee, because everything around me and inside me feels unimportant, forgotten, under this display. Small, sitting in the door way, the wind flicking sprays of water your way. I count in between the lashes of lightening One Mississippi Two Mississippi Three Mississippi Four, imagining the maker of these grizzling static sparks. The ground, the sky, my heart, pulsing.
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Nov 21, 2018
Nov 21, 2018 at 6:32 PM UTC
Thunderstorm
There's this light, really hollow expanse in my chest and it fills with electric stars, each blinking rapidly. I'll wear my jumper, loose bottoms and socks and I am engulfed by a sharp breeze, fleeing in through our open back door. I know that smell. It's cold and fluttering and full of purpose. And it pats my face as I breath it in. I think how easy it could be, and would have been, way in the past to believe in Gods and who prove their power by rylling up the weather. Blowing in a storm. All thunderstorms smell the same, wherever you are. And they each speak in heavy voices, rattling low. I suppose it's on you to look inside at your grievances unpaid to them. But I simply love the change. The power in the sky that strikes and rumbles, and the waiting, oh the waiting... As the clouds openly fuse and grind darker, the smell of the thunder growing thicker and bounding about. It's like a miracle how fast it happens, how much energy it feeds to everything. Time that was the insect looking at us, we are obnoxiously slow. Is now us looking at the insect, who is amazingly fast. Until... There's a moment when that energy reaches its capacity, the sky squeezing. And you wait Dddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddd The rain is unleashed. And sound everywhere explodes! Cause it's heavy and it's coming fast. Hopping back to the door, I sit just inside its frame my face stretching with glee, because everything around me and inside me feels unimportant, forgotten, under this display. Small, sitting in the door way, the wind flicking sprays of water your way. I count in between the lashes of lightening One Mississippi Two Mississippi Three Mississippi Four, imagining the maker of these grizzling static sparks. The ground, the sky, my heart, pulsing.
I really love a thunderstorm © 2018 Columbusphere All rights reserved
Columbusphere
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Nov 21, 2018
Nov 21, 2018 at 6:32 PM UTC
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