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There was no need to ever stop and ask if you were listening when I was mid-ramble. But I would anyway. It's true, you remembered everything, heard me above a football game, I'd stop mid sentence, and you hung on every word on the phone, attentive to any thought that passed by my lips. I think you must have really loved me for a while. When you left me, I never completely picked myself back up off the ground. No one was there to listen. Things escalated, I got lost in my mind, fell to pieces this summer. Homeless, I needed to leave, run away and brave the farmlands of America, get back to where I started, find the easy, unassuming cornfields of my youth to hide away in for a while. I called you at the end. You know how you said you were always listening? Feisty and broken and living in my car. Wild like a cornered animal, with darting, untrusting eyes. It was too late for me to talk. I wonder if you blame yourself. We got drunk because a part of you will always want me, and slept together in your new apartment that I was a stranger in. Do you remember the way my nails would dig into you? "Tell me you love me," I pleaded that night. Do you listen still to things I used to say in your head? You left me so long ago, but I know the voices of ghosts don't know how to keep time. I was ***** a month before. I don't know any other way to tell you. I didn't know him. Went out with him, hoping to meet a good listener I guess. He did all the talking. I was cautious and polite, but he got angry after a few drinks, something came over him, ****** and serpentine. Locked me in his truck and drove. I couldn't fight back, and that thrilled him. Made him want it more. His eyes were brown, the only thing gleaming in the dark. Carried me through tall cedars, pitch black night, miles from civilization. His own secret spot, he said. He was so strong, hands careless and hard. Tried to throw me into the water, rushing loud like dark acid, threatening to hide any evidence. Dispose of me easy. You left with more dignity, but it felt just the same. That's why I couldn't tell you. When I was brave and determined and set on changing things, I couldn't. When I was alone and broken and begging for it to stop, it didn't. How could I ask you for help that night? You gave up listening long before he left me wounded and tattered on the bank of the Sandy River. Two thousand miles away now, I sigh through rolling farms in perfect solitude, watching the same stars, fuzzy and far, that I watched helpless through cedars on that night that everything looked so far away. With practice, I learn to hear the sound of my own thoughts again and then, slowly and steadily, begin to explain myself to the only listening ears of corn around me.
0
Oct 27, 2011
Oct 27, 2011 at 6:23 PM UTC
Listening
There was no need to ever stop and ask if you were listening when I was mid-ramble. But I would anyway. It's true, you remembered everything, heard me above a football game, I'd stop mid sentence, and you hung on every word on the phone, attentive to any thought that passed by my lips. I think you must have really loved me for a while. When you left me, I never completely picked myself back up off the ground. No one was there to listen. Things escalated, I got lost in my mind, fell to pieces this summer. Homeless, I needed to leave, run away and brave the farmlands of America, get back to where I started, find the easy, unassuming cornfields of my youth to hide away in for a while. I called you at the end. You know how you said you were always listening? Feisty and broken and living in my car. Wild like a cornered animal, with darting, untrusting eyes. It was too late for me to talk. I wonder if you blame yourself. We got drunk because a part of you will always want me, and slept together in your new apartment that I was a stranger in. Do you remember the way my nails would dig into you? "Tell me you love me," I pleaded that night. Do you listen still to things I used to say in your head? You left me so long ago, but I know the voices of ghosts don't know how to keep time. I was ***** a month before. I don't know any other way to tell you. I didn't know him. Went out with him, hoping to meet a good listener I guess. He did all the talking. I was cautious and polite, but he got angry after a few drinks, something came over him, ****** and serpentine. Locked me in his truck and drove. I couldn't fight back, and that thrilled him. Made him want it more. His eyes were brown, the only thing gleaming in the dark. Carried me through tall cedars, pitch black night, miles from civilization. His own secret spot, he said. He was so strong, hands careless and hard. Tried to throw me into the water, rushing loud like dark acid, threatening to hide any evidence. Dispose of me easy. You left with more dignity, but it felt just the same. That's why I couldn't tell you. When I was brave and determined and set on changing things, I couldn't. When I was alone and broken and begging for it to stop, it didn't. How could I ask you for help that night? You gave up listening long before he left me wounded and tattered on the bank of the Sandy River. Two thousand miles away now, I sigh through rolling farms in perfect solitude, watching the same stars, fuzzy and far, that I watched helpless through cedars on that night that everything looked so far away. With practice, I learn to hear the sound of my own thoughts again and then, slowly and steadily, begin to explain myself to the only listening ears of corn around me.
sharon-stewart
Written by
Oct 27, 2011
Oct 27, 2011 at 6:23 PM UTC
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