Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
pushing toward the things I dreamed as a seed: a particulate of matter nestled under the blankets of earth and potentiality. I cried, I stretched my arms and felt the sand tucked around my shoulder blades start to fade away with the miles covered in a greyhound bus. I breathed, I blossomed; I held the moon in my hands and used it to put shimmer in my step. I tucked the unfinished pieces into my pocket and swore to return to them later, I picked the brightest flowers from the field and wove them into the braid that wrapped around my collarbones. I wrapped my sweater tight around the life I made, I watched it unravel with dwindling wonder. I found the fragments in my pocket gathering dust: some I set free into the fall air that smelled like my grandfather's garage, some I melted back into the veins of my heart, some I wrapped around the pigeons to keep them warm in the winter. I am a sliver of mica retrieved by an eight year old girl from a lake warm with the seaweed of summer. I glimmer in the sunlight and flake away piece by piece, floating to an atmosphere where I can reconstruct myself into the glossy details on the edge of a wave. I am all that I remember and all that I am becoming, constantly part of a new wave, of the same ocean, from the same lake. aren't we all just runaways?
0
Nov 25, 2012
Nov 25, 2012 at 5:56 AM UTC
before life and the dream collide
pushing toward the things I dreamed as a seed: a particulate of matter nestled under the blankets of earth and potentiality. I cried, I stretched my arms and felt the sand tucked around my shoulder blades start to fade away with the miles covered in a greyhound bus. I breathed, I blossomed; I held the moon in my hands and used it to put shimmer in my step. I tucked the unfinished pieces into my pocket and swore to return to them later, I picked the brightest flowers from the field and wove them into the braid that wrapped around my collarbones. I wrapped my sweater tight around the life I made, I watched it unravel with dwindling wonder. I found the fragments in my pocket gathering dust: some I set free into the fall air that smelled like my grandfather's garage, some I melted back into the veins of my heart, some I wrapped around the pigeons to keep them warm in the winter. I am a sliver of mica retrieved by an eight year old girl from a lake warm with the seaweed of summer. I glimmer in the sunlight and flake away piece by piece, floating to an atmosphere where I can reconstruct myself into the glossy details on the edge of a wave. I am all that I remember and all that I am becoming, constantly part of a new wave, of the same ocean, from the same lake. aren't we all just runaways?
patti-1
Written by
American
Nov 25, 2012
Nov 25, 2012 at 5:56 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem