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I’ve walked on the tiles made for kings many times I’ve been in the house of luxury but it has never belonged to me I am but a visitor in the palace of Eden I could describe the opulence but I cannot tell you how it feels to posses, to own, to carry your weight lightly in such states I am not a beholder and I’ve never felt myself worthy of such affluent and often unnecessary necessities working class woman on the weekends to clean the savvy bungalows of the ludicrous and almost laughable wealth of Beverly Hills it felt almost like trespassing, like jumping over train tracks As soon as you see sight of headlights getting closer and the earth beneath you tumble, shaking it’s veins I would wear a uniform, a knight’s armor of invisibility upon arrival, there was that shift in the air That momentary feeling that you’re not in Kansas anymore There are more trees here, the bugs even seem more alive than they did down there below the hills the pedestal of the hungry, greed sitting humbly on its’ throne smoking expensive colored cigarettes rings blowing in your face of cool breeze Although every residence was architecturally different it was always the same, the same austere patterns the redundant originality, the commonplace pretension The gates always had codes but the entrance was always open Whenever you stepped inside the first thing to notice were the Rorschach walls, the mirror image of whoever resided there the hollowness it evoked, the sterility of a life that although lived wasn’t honest dare I say unhappy There were usually film posters signed by movie stars long ago dead Art that said nothing, whose lips had been glued shut by clean dollar bills the brash ****** it tried to display lacked controversy in dusty rooms the irony being that it had become everything it tried to displease and yet I was envious the violent comfort it imposed was far more inviting than living in rations, in the poverty that ate at your skin it was friendliness with a clenched fist, like the hostess at a party that smiles too wide and moves her eyes too quickly sloshing her champagne glass but never quite spilling it I remember once stumbling upon one the owners of a house she was sitting in a wheelchair, there were diamonds on the wheels I thought I was meeting god for the first time she looked like she had lived ten lifetimes, wearing fox fur around her neck the paws resting defiantly on shaky shoulders age spots congregating around her eyes like whispering spies wrinkles weaving and unraveling from her forehead to her chin small nose inhaling sharp gulps of smoke, dust, reason she wore a translucent egg-shell colored gown that cascaded like a waterfall down to her tiny feet it was as transparent as her skin making her look like a one of those see-through fishes all organs and blood, bone with the marrow withering her eyes were closed but she spoke, piercing the room “so you’re the new girl. We don’t take kindly to strangers so she must’ve thought you were trustworthy, but I know someone’s true intentions. I can smell it. It’s a gift. It’s always the foreigners that wear masks. That’s how they survive and who can blame them I would do the same. I’ve been all over the world; the tips of my boots have been polished while there are others that fester like rats in their own caves. I know the contempt they must feel, I’ve never been held down by others more powerful than me and yet I know that it only creates misunderstanding. I didn’t ask for this. I earned this. All of this.” She pointed around the room. “I am the only one that can decide my fate. When you want something bad enough it is given to you. Most just want things for free. They want it handed to them in a silver plate with a golden spoon. **** will always shy away from the light because there is a sickness in their brains that don’t let them see past their disgusting oppression. I assume since you haven’t interrupted, I take your silence as a sign that you don’t believe what I am saying. That this piece of advice has flown over you. I very well could have written these words on a letter at the bottom of a stack of mail that will never be opened and that’s okay. I don’t expect you to believe to my truth. But the emperor you see before you was not conjured out of dust and thin air, I swear it.” She ended with an angry laugh. I wanted to say that her environment was polluted with cotton ***** and the furniture was contaminated with soot and dead skin cells that once everyone dies they turn into dirt, into the sand from which we seemed to have been composed of but I realized that she didn’t see herself as dying Seeing her there in the dark room with the shades drawn I realized if that’s what it took to become a god I didn’t want to be any more than human but all I said was “ma’am your plants are in need of watering.”
0
Jul 1, 2017
Jul 1, 2017 at 5:26 AM UTC
Dehydrated Milk
I’ve walked on the tiles made for kings many times I’ve been in the house of luxury but it has never belonged to me I am but a visitor in the palace of Eden I could describe the opulence but I cannot tell you how it feels to posses, to own, to carry your weight lightly in such states I am not a beholder and I’ve never felt myself worthy of such affluent and often unnecessary necessities working class woman on the weekends to clean the savvy bungalows of the ludicrous and almost laughable wealth of Beverly Hills it felt almost like trespassing, like jumping over train tracks As soon as you see sight of headlights getting closer and the earth beneath you tumble, shaking it’s veins I would wear a uniform, a knight’s armor of invisibility upon arrival, there was that shift in the air That momentary feeling that you’re not in Kansas anymore There are more trees here, the bugs even seem more alive than they did down there below the hills the pedestal of the hungry, greed sitting humbly on its’ throne smoking expensive colored cigarettes rings blowing in your face of cool breeze Although every residence was architecturally different it was always the same, the same austere patterns the redundant originality, the commonplace pretension The gates always had codes but the entrance was always open Whenever you stepped inside the first thing to notice were the Rorschach walls, the mirror image of whoever resided there the hollowness it evoked, the sterility of a life that although lived wasn’t honest dare I say unhappy There were usually film posters signed by movie stars long ago dead Art that said nothing, whose lips had been glued shut by clean dollar bills the brash ****** it tried to display lacked controversy in dusty rooms the irony being that it had become everything it tried to displease and yet I was envious the violent comfort it imposed was far more inviting than living in rations, in the poverty that ate at your skin it was friendliness with a clenched fist, like the hostess at a party that smiles too wide and moves her eyes too quickly sloshing her champagne glass but never quite spilling it I remember once stumbling upon one the owners of a house she was sitting in a wheelchair, there were diamonds on the wheels I thought I was meeting god for the first time she looked like she had lived ten lifetimes, wearing fox fur around her neck the paws resting defiantly on shaky shoulders age spots congregating around her eyes like whispering spies wrinkles weaving and unraveling from her forehead to her chin small nose inhaling sharp gulps of smoke, dust, reason she wore a translucent egg-shell colored gown that cascaded like a waterfall down to her tiny feet it was as transparent as her skin making her look like a one of those see-through fishes all organs and blood, bone with the marrow withering her eyes were closed but she spoke, piercing the room “so you’re the new girl. We don’t take kindly to strangers so she must’ve thought you were trustworthy, but I know someone’s true intentions. I can smell it. It’s a gift. It’s always the foreigners that wear masks. That’s how they survive and who can blame them I would do the same. I’ve been all over the world; the tips of my boots have been polished while there are others that fester like rats in their own caves. I know the contempt they must feel, I’ve never been held down by others more powerful than me and yet I know that it only creates misunderstanding. I didn’t ask for this. I earned this. All of this.” She pointed around the room. “I am the only one that can decide my fate. When you want something bad enough it is given to you. Most just want things for free. They want it handed to them in a silver plate with a golden spoon. **** will always shy away from the light because there is a sickness in their brains that don’t let them see past their disgusting oppression. I assume since you haven’t interrupted, I take your silence as a sign that you don’t believe what I am saying. That this piece of advice has flown over you. I very well could have written these words on a letter at the bottom of a stack of mail that will never be opened and that’s okay. I don’t expect you to believe to my truth. But the emperor you see before you was not conjured out of dust and thin air, I swear it.” She ended with an angry laugh. I wanted to say that her environment was polluted with cotton ***** and the furniture was contaminated with soot and dead skin cells that once everyone dies they turn into dirt, into the sand from which we seemed to have been composed of but I realized that she didn’t see herself as dying Seeing her there in the dark room with the shades drawn I realized if that’s what it took to become a god I didn’t want to be any more than human but all I said was “ma’am your plants are in need of watering.”
chose dehydrated milk for the title because it is often sent to third world countries so it can feed communities that can't afford food
nosebleedbaby
Written by
Jul 1, 2017
Jul 1, 2017 at 5:26 AM UTC
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