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To Whom It May Concern: I have been an artist since birth but clearly not genetically. My mother was a dentist’s apprentice, while I was in the womb. My father was a quirky astrophysicist and still amidst the devils, he is yet to find himself.   I on the other hand make sandwiches. I make sandwiches, I take photos, and I write the things that I sense or that I think I know. Very simple. I have never been one to understand the American dream, but I do respect my need for it. I knew the idealistic trend of the Internet very well, as I was raised in Silicon Valley, but the phrase “From rags to riches” never really penetrated my questioning soul. -------------- Instead, I found that the world was my oyster and I gregariously lived my life in the pursuit of one-dollar oysters. I have watched the seasons change. I have known the plight of love and I’m even wise enough to lead my heart by it. Elisa would tell you. -------------- I have gawked at knobby shadows falling on a wall traced out by a winter tree and then been entranced by the odds that I might be the one who sought out that beauty having been there to see it too. But more so, I have seen births. I have seen the vibrancy from which life unfolds. And I have seen the clenches of deaths fingers wrap around the neck of my most honored and beloved people. I’ve seen beautiful cities fall prey to oversaturation, I’ve watched the crashing waves of the Pacific Ocean **** in pollution, I’ve seen fires blaze through the mountain sides of Santa Barbara, and I’ve watched the shoals bats that fly at the twilight summons from underneath bowels of South Congress Bridge, which is never bad. I’ve made friends, and I have made enemies both of which I love. I have been sick then been healthy and respect the values of their lessons. Some of the other things I’ve seen I’ll admit are unimportant. -------------- But I still watch the trickling patterns of rainfall and ponder at their stories. I still squint at the gleam of the ocean and beg it to tell me its origins. I will always gaze at the sky and I ask for a gust that might make the hairs of my arm tingle with delight, or nostalgic sorrow, or anything at all. I’ve questioned everything but what my mother told me. Not until I turned eighteen, did I start that. I’ve built batteries out of vinegar, aspirin, pennies and copper wire. I charge the insight of my peers by poking and prodding. I can braid hair, I can hop scotch, I can play the juice harp. I fight for the underdog. I fight for the tormented. I speak for the scolded, the hated, the sad, the abused, the forgotten, the forsaken, the foolish, the sinning, the begging, the beaten, the overworked, the shy, the lost, the hungry, the bilious, the old, the gruesome and the dead. I feast on alcohol where there is no other sustenance. The rhythm of chagrin bounces in my chest, as a drum would beat in a symphony of regret.   But I strive on as if it was a sacrifice to the holy aliens that made the Maya sacrifice too. This is my blood. It gushes from my blue veins as I apperceive the meaning of that throbbing pulse. I know the consequence of the truth behind our movement. A world founded on humanity, imperfect and failing at all. Life in this universe must be special. It’s the stardust in our physical, human elements that makes this magic true. We ooze with the likeness of nothing else. Our ancestors welled up with stardust and DNA from somewhere else. Our sweat, made up of passing galaxies, dripping tears of organic thought into the trickling river of time. That alone must be something to capture an imagination.
0
Jul 19, 2016
Jul 19, 2016 at 2:26 AM UTC
To whom it may concern:
To Whom It May Concern: I have been an artist since birth but clearly not genetically. My mother was a dentist’s apprentice, while I was in the womb. My father was a quirky astrophysicist and still amidst the devils, he is yet to find himself.   I on the other hand make sandwiches. I make sandwiches, I take photos, and I write the things that I sense or that I think I know. Very simple. I have never been one to understand the American dream, but I do respect my need for it. I knew the idealistic trend of the Internet very well, as I was raised in Silicon Valley, but the phrase “From rags to riches” never really penetrated my questioning soul. -------------- Instead, I found that the world was my oyster and I gregariously lived my life in the pursuit of one-dollar oysters. I have watched the seasons change. I have known the plight of love and I’m even wise enough to lead my heart by it. Elisa would tell you. -------------- I have gawked at knobby shadows falling on a wall traced out by a winter tree and then been entranced by the odds that I might be the one who sought out that beauty having been there to see it too. But more so, I have seen births. I have seen the vibrancy from which life unfolds. And I have seen the clenches of deaths fingers wrap around the neck of my most honored and beloved people. I’ve seen beautiful cities fall prey to oversaturation, I’ve watched the crashing waves of the Pacific Ocean **** in pollution, I’ve seen fires blaze through the mountain sides of Santa Barbara, and I’ve watched the shoals bats that fly at the twilight summons from underneath bowels of South Congress Bridge, which is never bad. I’ve made friends, and I have made enemies both of which I love. I have been sick then been healthy and respect the values of their lessons. Some of the other things I’ve seen I’ll admit are unimportant. -------------- But I still watch the trickling patterns of rainfall and ponder at their stories. I still squint at the gleam of the ocean and beg it to tell me its origins. I will always gaze at the sky and I ask for a gust that might make the hairs of my arm tingle with delight, or nostalgic sorrow, or anything at all. I’ve questioned everything but what my mother told me. Not until I turned eighteen, did I start that. I’ve built batteries out of vinegar, aspirin, pennies and copper wire. I charge the insight of my peers by poking and prodding. I can braid hair, I can hop scotch, I can play the juice harp. I fight for the underdog. I fight for the tormented. I speak for the scolded, the hated, the sad, the abused, the forgotten, the forsaken, the foolish, the sinning, the begging, the beaten, the overworked, the shy, the lost, the hungry, the bilious, the old, the gruesome and the dead. I feast on alcohol where there is no other sustenance. The rhythm of chagrin bounces in my chest, as a drum would beat in a symphony of regret.   But I strive on as if it was a sacrifice to the holy aliens that made the Maya sacrifice too. This is my blood. It gushes from my blue veins as I apperceive the meaning of that throbbing pulse. I know the consequence of the truth behind our movement. A world founded on humanity, imperfect and failing at all. Life in this universe must be special. It’s the stardust in our physical, human elements that makes this magic true. We ooze with the likeness of nothing else. Our ancestors welled up with stardust and DNA from somewhere else. Our sweat, made up of passing galaxies, dripping tears of organic thought into the trickling river of time. That alone must be something to capture an imagination.
gusse
Written by
M/Scottish
Jul 19, 2016
Jul 19, 2016 at 2:26 AM UTC
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