Thanks for the title, Boss.
When I was a kid
my hometown
basked in that
(uncertain) period
of peace and
prosperity between
Korea and Vietnam.
It bustled
with busyness
and it seemed like
everyone knew
everyone and there
was always more.
Even the poor
felt included.
Half a century later,
peace has fled
for good and
prosperity too,
leaving only
vacant storefronts
and neighbors
who do not know
each other.
Perhaps this
was inevitable;
perhaps it is
progress.
But there are
moments when
it feels like
a lifetime is
just too much
to witness,
just too long
to live.
Nobody loves
a corpse.
~mce
Nov 19, 2015
Nov 19, 2015 at 10:45 AM UTC
Thanks for the title, Boss.
When I was a kid
my hometown
basked in that
(uncertain) period
of peace and
prosperity between
Korea and Vietnam.
It bustled
with busyness
and it seemed like
everyone knew
everyone and there
was always more.
Even the poor
felt included.
Half a century later,
peace has fled
for good and
prosperity too,
leaving only
vacant storefronts
and neighbors
who do not know
each other.
Perhaps this
was inevitable;
perhaps it is
progress.
But there are
moments when
it feels like
a lifetime is
just too much
to witness,
just too long
to live.
Nobody loves
a corpse.
~mce
