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White knuckles, clenched ping-pinging on textured glass. Unfazed, he turns his cheek, followed closely by his deaf ear. So I stay stuck, hopeless, tugging on some hem, with a relentless, gut-twisting hunger to be acknowledged, to be comforted and cradled, to be lulled and hushed— pleading him to poke some holes in the lid of this jar. I used to oxygenate my blood so beautifully— flush my pale skin to pink, press it against yours, and breathe. When I had air, I used to inhale so deeply. I used to live. I used to conquer. I would wake myself before the dawn, if only to brighten his dark corners. I used to breathe before life in this jar. I used to catch his glances and celebrate as the reason for his smiles. Before life in this jar, I could reach him, and he would reach me. He would pick me up in his smooth palm and hold me in my place in the sun. With warmed cheeks, I’d kiss him softly on the forehead and thank him in wide, grinning whispers for the lift. Before life in this jar he would never find me gasping for the strength to make breathy apologies simply for existing. He would never find me enjoying such a slow motion asphyxiation like I do as I live life in this jar.
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Aug 15, 2014
Aug 15, 2014 at 10:14 AM UTC
empathy for a lightning bug
White knuckles, clenched ping-pinging on textured glass. Unfazed, he turns his cheek, followed closely by his deaf ear. So I stay stuck, hopeless, tugging on some hem, with a relentless, gut-twisting hunger to be acknowledged, to be comforted and cradled, to be lulled and hushed— pleading him to poke some holes in the lid of this jar. I used to oxygenate my blood so beautifully— flush my pale skin to pink, press it against yours, and breathe. When I had air, I used to inhale so deeply. I used to live. I used to conquer. I would wake myself before the dawn, if only to brighten his dark corners. I used to breathe before life in this jar. I used to catch his glances and celebrate as the reason for his smiles. Before life in this jar, I could reach him, and he would reach me. He would pick me up in his smooth palm and hold me in my place in the sun. With warmed cheeks, I’d kiss him softly on the forehead and thank him in wide, grinning whispers for the lift. Before life in this jar he would never find me gasping for the strength to make breathy apologies simply for existing. He would never find me enjoying such a slow motion asphyxiation like I do as I live life in this jar.
© Bitsy Sanders, August 2014
bforshort
Written by
36/F/American
Aug 15, 2014
Aug 15, 2014 at 10:14 AM UTC
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