Question 1. can you escape the words that so easily want to roll off your tongue can you put them away see them off on a ship
have them cross into the horizon and dissipate under the burning red sun of the east Question 2. Can you replace all letters of an alphabet that easily taught, rolled off your tongue can you put them in a shoe box, seclude them in a corner of your new life, where 80% of the time you are fine Do you think they will cross too cross the horizon, like the things you wish would and then dissipate Question 3.
Does the pollution amplify the heat, if so can the heat burn or melt old Polaroids
this is a writing experiment how close can you get to the space between the source and conception of a question my answer was to play with grammar usage asking questions that need no grammatical indication of their querying because i want the structure to more adequately reflect the state of mind i’m in while i ask these questions. obscurity. I do not know what I seek by inquiring, and so these questions do not know their own purpose, thus by not including a question mark the statements above never fulfill all the grammatical prerequisites of a question, the statement has yet to realize it is a question and just lingers somewhere in between.limbo. If you’ve made it this far, give feedback please. What else can I do to deconstruct the structure of a question? Do these above statements feel like they are real questions?