when I was younger I got into staring contests with the sunset despite dire warnings I challenged him
I thought I would live forever back then or maybe I just wanted him to blink out before I did
I fear death
I grew up a Christian reading about Narnia and there was one man after escaping ten years of living in a nightmare as relief from his waking horror he was given the gift of sleep without dreams forever now as well as then I struggle to comprehend how this was a reward
to fall asleep and never dream and never wake this is death as far as we can tell
in my childhood this was the only exposure I had to the idea of VOID
and now it yawns wide open at the feet of this newly formed atheist and I am afraid
‘I never asked to be born in the first place’ -Last words of Adolf ****** (per Kilgore trout (per Kurt Vonnegut Jr.))
the sunset is deep deep orange and summer is fading from green to red and yellow then to brown then to white
I’m thinking of Christmas watching a hawk fly silhouetted against the now hot pink clouds to the sound of cicadas and a whisper of moist and cooling air
winter is hard to get through
then again so is summer
the sky above me is the shade of lavender I fell in love with when I couldn’t find anyone who loved me back
I was taking a bus trip from December to late spring everyone else was asleep and I watched the sun rise through palm trees and ferns
if the afterlife is composed of floating through my time in this life Tralfamadorian Heaven I will be content
I am living now
This was written more as a way of working some thoughts out than as a poem. I like it though, so I'm putting it up here anyway. 'Tralfamadorian Heaven' is a reference to Slaughterhouse-Five, by the way. There's a fair amount of Vonnegut in this one. Hope you like it. :)