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I breathed, and with my breath gave birth, again and again and again. My lungs housed planets which flew from my lips to rest in a space not too far from the nest of infinity-wide hips. I perfumed myself with the stardust that lay about my shelves, while my eyes wandered to the children who kept their quiet and took their time to build their lives away from mine. Nine children: four boys, four girls- One lonely in-between, the closest to my breast, chilled by the distance from its father's heart. My third child, of the cleanest hue leapt bounds ahead the others, covered white, green and blue. If the others are jealous, they never say so for their silence is their virtue, their mystery their status. But, despite her siblings' monarchy glamour, it was my third baby, who became a mother. I paint my nails with the polish given as gifts from my un-answering offspring. They throw me pieces of their atmosphere to wear around my neck, and I accept all these gifts with gratitude, glad they exercise respect. My third child sends me probes, satellites, and sends rocket ships to her uncle. Her children thrive and mine her body, and she sits daintily, between her sister and her brother, allowing them to farm her so; her duty as a mother. As I age, the wrinkles of my skin deepen, and occasionally, something far away collapses. I find I age better than their father; better than all the fathers that came ahead. I have always outlasted them. I will never lie upon a deathbed. It is my duty as their mother to watch as my babies eventually perish. Aged well, aged strong, dramatic endings. But such is life, and such am I, and I am always law- and after death comes life again, multitudes and more.
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Nov 5, 2015
Nov 5, 2015 at 5:43 AM UTC
Motherhood
I breathed, and with my breath gave birth, again and again and again. My lungs housed planets which flew from my lips to rest in a space not too far from the nest of infinity-wide hips. I perfumed myself with the stardust that lay about my shelves, while my eyes wandered to the children who kept their quiet and took their time to build their lives away from mine. Nine children: four boys, four girls- One lonely in-between, the closest to my breast, chilled by the distance from its father's heart. My third child, of the cleanest hue leapt bounds ahead the others, covered white, green and blue. If the others are jealous, they never say so for their silence is their virtue, their mystery their status. But, despite her siblings' monarchy glamour, it was my third baby, who became a mother. I paint my nails with the polish given as gifts from my un-answering offspring. They throw me pieces of their atmosphere to wear around my neck, and I accept all these gifts with gratitude, glad they exercise respect. My third child sends me probes, satellites, and sends rocket ships to her uncle. Her children thrive and mine her body, and she sits daintily, between her sister and her brother, allowing them to farm her so; her duty as a mother. As I age, the wrinkles of my skin deepen, and occasionally, something far away collapses. I find I age better than their father; better than all the fathers that came ahead. I have always outlasted them. I will never lie upon a deathbed. It is my duty as their mother to watch as my babies eventually perish. Aged well, aged strong, dramatic endings. But such is life, and such am I, and I am always law- and after death comes life again, multitudes and more.
anniec
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Nov 5, 2015
Nov 5, 2015 at 5:43 AM UTC
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