Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
Candy floss and a visit to the arcade: That's all it took to bring things back an hour to the moment before a missed step. Panic, pandemonium, a parallel universe is what I came to; Landed, rag-dolled on a weather-worn, rice field imitation rock. What I would give to see myself From the edge. To see the angles my body chose while I was away bringing my dearest to my side. First I collected my sister with a scream that belongs Only in stories that deal with grief: Guttural. Come to think of it, that acrid ancestral call didn't belong to me. I wasn't the one who pricked her from her periwinkles And guided her over the barnacles to become a silhouette. It wasn't me who dragged the adrenaline-fueled arms and legs of an undressed, distressed father from his bed, through the Haze of his own thoughts: a descent he wont soon forget. I wasn't there. The things I describe are born of a situation I have spent fifteen years rebuilding; I'm ashamed to say I missed it. I never felt the chaotic shift of the wind and was never   able to expect the worst because I was too enthralled with her face. It was my sole focus as I lay down. I watched intently - in slow motion - distortion explode into her cheeks, tearing her mouth to the seams; scared eyes enveloping lids and unwavering, taking me all in.   I have no doubt she remembers the moment as well as i do, Probably more so, for she experienced the backwash. She was certainly shown the quickest way down. I remember that it was beautiful that day: A real Irish-sunburn peak in Liscannor Bay. I also remember walking down the garden To the cliff stenciled on the back of my hand with the cheerful arrogance only an eight year old can get away with.
0
Apr 8, 2015
Apr 8, 2015 at 9:57 PM UTC
Retracing Steps
Candy floss and a visit to the arcade: That's all it took to bring things back an hour to the moment before a missed step. Panic, pandemonium, a parallel universe is what I came to; Landed, rag-dolled on a weather-worn, rice field imitation rock. What I would give to see myself From the edge. To see the angles my body chose while I was away bringing my dearest to my side. First I collected my sister with a scream that belongs Only in stories that deal with grief: Guttural. Come to think of it, that acrid ancestral call didn't belong to me. I wasn't the one who pricked her from her periwinkles And guided her over the barnacles to become a silhouette. It wasn't me who dragged the adrenaline-fueled arms and legs of an undressed, distressed father from his bed, through the Haze of his own thoughts: a descent he wont soon forget. I wasn't there. The things I describe are born of a situation I have spent fifteen years rebuilding; I'm ashamed to say I missed it. I never felt the chaotic shift of the wind and was never   able to expect the worst because I was too enthralled with her face. It was my sole focus as I lay down. I watched intently - in slow motion - distortion explode into her cheeks, tearing her mouth to the seams; scared eyes enveloping lids and unwavering, taking me all in.   I have no doubt she remembers the moment as well as i do, Probably more so, for she experienced the backwash. She was certainly shown the quickest way down. I remember that it was beautiful that day: A real Irish-sunburn peak in Liscannor Bay. I also remember walking down the garden To the cliff stenciled on the back of my hand with the cheerful arrogance only an eight year old can get away with.
. When i was young, I experienced real irony for the first time but didn't quite know it. While showing my aunt, along with my little cousin the safest, easiest, quickest way down a cliff, i fell from it. This is my attempted recollection of events. .
leigh321f
Written by
Apr 8, 2015
Apr 8, 2015 at 9:57 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem