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Syncope

Calcified age lines,

driftwood was once a shiny ship:

hallowed bow, curved spine, dead.

 

Jaundiced and gaunt didn’t appear

until after the fact,

break a bottle on its back

because I'm facedown,

dead drunk, waves of saliva breaking

desperately against the asphalt.

Tree branches grappling together in the wind

are handsome

like a handshake

in a bad poem

but they're just trees, just wood.

I am slowburning like an all natural cigarette.

 

Jaunt through the woods. Drinking spot.

Acrid friends.

Warm bonfire, I want it to be more like a movie.  

Davy Jones my sorrows. Sitting on a log.

Rock bottom and I’m sitting on a log.

Weird girl comes over, she’s artsy and dyslexic.

I hate that word. Artsy. **** you.

She asks if I’m okay and I say yeah.

 

At home,

exhume pillowcase from *****

futon forget-me-nots

some thick haired little boy

had curled up to die inside;

 

Post embrace.

Crashed; a solemnly sinking ship captain

with skin peeling like lottery tickets

too leather-faced to shout anything but

TEN THOUSAND THUNDERING TYPHOONS

as he goes down

with his cracked nymphal exoskeleton

wipes the fire off his brow

he is burning like an all natural cigarette

but phoenixes are not legends

they are metaphors,

and that is enough difference for me.

 

The sea is salty and stinging

and they say

a smooth one

never made a skillful sailor

but you cannot build a ship

out of driftwood,

just watch one deteriorate into it.

 

Maybe that’s the point.

 

For three years,

I found myself in an oozing freefall

base jumping as I carved through the air

like an anchor

parachute made of somber bottle twist

carved cork and microscope slide,

salt stained shoes,

brackish eyes

distort flashes of organic sunlight

thick necked forays into begging for fare

at deserted train stations

lashed out at friends with bullwhip arms

I couldn’t reach my own back

freefalling, base camp

welling up to greet me

from the depths of a tar pit

but the thing about rock bottoms is:

if they don’t destroy you

they give you something solid to stand on.

 

And if you leap back up, spread eagle

Like a petrified starfish, swim through that tar pit

that is ocean, the warm hovel of under the covers,

Bonfire, whiskey in the back of an old sailors throat,

All natural cigarette,

You can be born again. I promise.

 

Depression is not sadness, it is the absence of hope

And it is numb. Reduces us to ashes and drowns us all at once.

But it waxes and it wanes, burns itself out if you let it.

 

And from that flame, scattered splinters in the ocean,

The shedding of my cracked, nymphal exoskeleton,

I understood the impermanence and necessity of flailing tendrils

White hot curling up a mainmast like a handshake

Wet flesh in the womb of moment between sleep and wake,

Breath slipping away like low tide

Gasping for air until it’s easier to ****

Oxygen out of the saltwater in your lungs

Pain killed a boy and made a man

 

Watch a phoenix **** a baptism

Violently conjure steam into existence

Just for it to disappear, watch them smile.

You’ll understand.

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Written by
tc
American
Published
Mar 19, 2013
Lines·Words
89·529
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