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Fairfax Station’s socialite, a trustfundee Still hallucinates on a lone hammock In her penthouse. Her ex-idols still burn the light green foliage From the Tree of Experience. Her sister’s a screenwriter Who lives near downtown in a cobwebbed basement. Each morning she composes a page of dialogue. Usually There the fragments of yesterday’s conversations With an insomniac. She is the turned page In a worn storybook. Her shutter snaps mental photographs Through a blurred lens. The girls’ father Is a patient in an asylum, in his leisure, he treads Water in a soiled bedpan. Psychotherapy and straightjackets Cannot restrain his work ethic for Art. Before his admittance To the institution, in his studio, on a giant canvass He painted the green youth that struggles to Grow in an elementary school. The socialite is undeclared In her major. Unsure of faith leaping. Remains pessimistic at charity functions. Vast Auditoriums with smudged tablecloth. She’s accompanied By an entourage of underdeveloped emotions. On occasion she side glances from a hand mirror At a potential love interest. It’s too soon. The spring is a late bloomer, blue frost clings To the edges of grass blades. At a coffee shop on The corner of Main and North Harrison Street, The screenwriter raps away at her laptop; talking To herself. Her coffee foams at the mouth with expired cream. A welcomed patron to this local getaway; This is where her father used to read her articles From the Washington Post. He nearly hanged himself After the car accident. His wife’s body smashed Halfway through a windshield. Around his wrist Is the Movado, she gave him for their anniversary. For months now, for an hour before night class, Our writer opens up her treasure chest of demons To a word document. She’s almost thirty. The divorce took her strength, Along with her two legacies. Yesteryear, or Was it the day before yesteryear? The talented Family met at a Hibachi restaurant. They had a Gift card to use. It was a day after the funeral; there black Clothes were wrinkled, just a bit. Napkins lay Folded over their laps. Silverware untouched. Hot bowls of miso soup grew cold. Visits to The bathroom were common. Tsnumai of Mixed emotions: trickled, flooded, filled there eyes. The foreign chef noticed their mood, he Could only offer body language. In the air Swan eggs were cracked into two halves. The yolk sizzled on the aluminum surface. Fire soared from an onion volcano. Mouths Watered, and eyes were parched. Kobe steak, Grilled vegetables, juicy chicken, fried rice. They chewed their food with shut mouths And gutwrenched eyes. They sat and ate Until every last morsel disappeared. Over her balcony, she leans on the railing Of her loft. Ashtray spills Marlboro’s remains That plummet onto a city of funny people. She can’t use humor as a defensive mechanism, Why should she? Her credit card is her alcohol. Her eyes daydream of elevators And clothing stores. She lays out in Her hammock, wondering why an automobile Had to be the antagonist. They all live above the billboards, below the heavens.
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Aug 31, 2016
Aug 31, 2016 at 2:09 PM UTC
Funfax
Fairfax Station’s socialite, a trustfundee Still hallucinates on a lone hammock In her penthouse. Her ex-idols still burn the light green foliage From the Tree of Experience. Her sister’s a screenwriter Who lives near downtown in a cobwebbed basement. Each morning she composes a page of dialogue. Usually There the fragments of yesterday’s conversations With an insomniac. She is the turned page In a worn storybook. Her shutter snaps mental photographs Through a blurred lens. The girls’ father Is a patient in an asylum, in his leisure, he treads Water in a soiled bedpan. Psychotherapy and straightjackets Cannot restrain his work ethic for Art. Before his admittance To the institution, in his studio, on a giant canvass He painted the green youth that struggles to Grow in an elementary school. The socialite is undeclared In her major. Unsure of faith leaping. Remains pessimistic at charity functions. Vast Auditoriums with smudged tablecloth. She’s accompanied By an entourage of underdeveloped emotions. On occasion she side glances from a hand mirror At a potential love interest. It’s too soon. The spring is a late bloomer, blue frost clings To the edges of grass blades. At a coffee shop on The corner of Main and North Harrison Street, The screenwriter raps away at her laptop; talking To herself. Her coffee foams at the mouth with expired cream. A welcomed patron to this local getaway; This is where her father used to read her articles From the Washington Post. He nearly hanged himself After the car accident. His wife’s body smashed Halfway through a windshield. Around his wrist Is the Movado, she gave him for their anniversary. For months now, for an hour before night class, Our writer opens up her treasure chest of demons To a word document. She’s almost thirty. The divorce took her strength, Along with her two legacies. Yesteryear, or Was it the day before yesteryear? The talented Family met at a Hibachi restaurant. They had a Gift card to use. It was a day after the funeral; there black Clothes were wrinkled, just a bit. Napkins lay Folded over their laps. Silverware untouched. Hot bowls of miso soup grew cold. Visits to The bathroom were common. Tsnumai of Mixed emotions: trickled, flooded, filled there eyes. The foreign chef noticed their mood, he Could only offer body language. In the air Swan eggs were cracked into two halves. The yolk sizzled on the aluminum surface. Fire soared from an onion volcano. Mouths Watered, and eyes were parched. Kobe steak, Grilled vegetables, juicy chicken, fried rice. They chewed their food with shut mouths And gutwrenched eyes. They sat and ate Until every last morsel disappeared. Over her balcony, she leans on the railing Of her loft. Ashtray spills Marlboro’s remains That plummet onto a city of funny people. She can’t use humor as a defensive mechanism, Why should she? Her credit card is her alcohol. Her eyes daydream of elevators And clothing stores. She lays out in Her hammock, wondering why an automobile Had to be the antagonist. They all live above the billboards, below the heavens.
dannyartreads
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Aug 31, 2016
Aug 31, 2016 at 2:09 PM UTC
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