He walks across the great expanse as if a ghost. He walks alone and out of place as two by two the joggers pass and barely glance as if its normal
to behold a ghost. What they don’t see defines his life, the tortured demon voice inside his head that taunts and teases all day long and tells him he “ain’t spit” and “ugly is forever”.
He’d been neglected all his life but now that he’s become a man he thought the love he sought would save him from the way it was when he was young. His problem now is wrapped around his backward thought that love is his to find and take instead of his to give and share, if only he had learned this in his childhood.
He slowly mounts the rail between the ocher beams on Golden Gate and looks at murky water far below. His clothes are black, his hair is long and black, his skin as white as snow. He stands ***** while looking back to see if one might lend a hand but no one does. He smiles a smile and turns around and then as if he’s been cut down he leans, unbending, and falls.
A hundred miles away a mother knows her child is dead. She bows her head in shame and cries, the why at war with guilt. A part of her is gone, a part she can’t deny or blame as someone else's fault instead she hates herself for never having loved the boy, but even more she hates the hurt. If only she had fought the urge to drink, if only she had loved him half as much as that crazy **** she used to smoke, the **** she called her ‘crystal blue persuasion’. If only she could turn the hands of time and rearrange the things that mattered most.
A flare is dropped to mark the spot where he went in, the flaming red a beacon on a bay of mother’s tears. Another soul engulfed in grief is gone, the deed is done. A crowd is gathered at the rail to point and stare as boats approach the flare where men with hooks will pull him out while mother drinks 100 miles away.
Inspired by the 2007 documentary "The Bridge", and written in memory of over 1200 troubled souls who have committed suicide by jumping from the Golden Gate Bridge since it opened in 1937