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We are stories told through carbon bonds and the smoky trail of cigarettes— the distant chatter from porches and balconies, caught out of context in a moment of humanity. The faint light of illuminated apartment windows, inches parted curtains unveiling another segment of infinity. Overlooking the lackluster glory of Fairborn, Ohio from the balcony of a student apartment, the smoke from her cigarette vanishing like the sweet impermanence of mortality, Alena stares. Too pensive to tend to the nearly-falling ashy tip of her Camel Silver, our conversation stagnates. Bonded intimately by growing into the stumbling result of our respective ****** childhoods—aching for the familiarity of disaster— we find ourselves pondering the answered question of why we’re repeating history. The street is nearly empty; the traffic sleeps. Sparsely spaced cars cruise on by like gypsy travelers. 8am is for commuters—a sensible time, but 3:30 is for the lonely. A time to uncover what daytime banishes to the subconscious— the peak time for catharsis too inconvenient for civilization. When insomniacs stare restlessly at ceilings, and when the desperate tearfully pray; when procrastinators type frantic essays, when the chaste ********** when the stoic weep. And then of course, there are poets like me half-drunk on seven dollar tequila after working the night shift, cultivating my loneliness. I can’t finish your story for you, Alena, but I will say this: there is a reason why advertisements repeat their names a mind-numbing number of times. They don’t necessarily think you’re stupid enough to assume their product is superior for that reason, but they’re relying on that one moment you’re rushed into a dilemma, too frazzled to think. You’ll reach for whatever name has been shouted to you the most just because it’s familiar. Of course, that’s a terrible reason and not grounded on anything sound, but something-something caveman brain that evolved to escape a ******* mastodon rather than perpetuating poor life choices, itches for familiarity. And though anyone who says we write our own stories has never looked beyond the microcosm of their own apartment window (or realized we don’t own them at all) no one was ever prepared to make any decision with consequence, so of course we **** it up. But at least resist the dark temptation of habit like a type II diabetic before a chocolate cake. We are stories, and the rest of infinity passes us by— it sounds daunting, I know, but I’ll be willing to bet that the bulk of it is just the familiar perpetuating itself.
0
Oct 28, 2014
Oct 28, 2014 at 2:45 PM UTC
"Stories"
We are stories told through carbon bonds and the smoky trail of cigarettes— the distant chatter from porches and balconies, caught out of context in a moment of humanity. The faint light of illuminated apartment windows, inches parted curtains unveiling another segment of infinity. Overlooking the lackluster glory of Fairborn, Ohio from the balcony of a student apartment, the smoke from her cigarette vanishing like the sweet impermanence of mortality, Alena stares. Too pensive to tend to the nearly-falling ashy tip of her Camel Silver, our conversation stagnates. Bonded intimately by growing into the stumbling result of our respective ****** childhoods—aching for the familiarity of disaster— we find ourselves pondering the answered question of why we’re repeating history. The street is nearly empty; the traffic sleeps. Sparsely spaced cars cruise on by like gypsy travelers. 8am is for commuters—a sensible time, but 3:30 is for the lonely. A time to uncover what daytime banishes to the subconscious— the peak time for catharsis too inconvenient for civilization. When insomniacs stare restlessly at ceilings, and when the desperate tearfully pray; when procrastinators type frantic essays, when the chaste ********** when the stoic weep. And then of course, there are poets like me half-drunk on seven dollar tequila after working the night shift, cultivating my loneliness. I can’t finish your story for you, Alena, but I will say this: there is a reason why advertisements repeat their names a mind-numbing number of times. They don’t necessarily think you’re stupid enough to assume their product is superior for that reason, but they’re relying on that one moment you’re rushed into a dilemma, too frazzled to think. You’ll reach for whatever name has been shouted to you the most just because it’s familiar. Of course, that’s a terrible reason and not grounded on anything sound, but something-something caveman brain that evolved to escape a ******* mastodon rather than perpetuating poor life choices, itches for familiarity. And though anyone who says we write our own stories has never looked beyond the microcosm of their own apartment window (or realized we don’t own them at all) no one was ever prepared to make any decision with consequence, so of course we **** it up. But at least resist the dark temptation of habit like a type II diabetic before a chocolate cake. We are stories, and the rest of infinity passes us by— it sounds daunting, I know, but I’ll be willing to bet that the bulk of it is just the familiar perpetuating itself.
alyssa-rose-evans
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Oct 28, 2014
Oct 28, 2014 at 2:45 PM UTC
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