Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
The trees outside my neighbor's house cover shame like my neighbor's blouse. And the yard, oh my god, so perfect; so, so, so suburban you could stay safe, forever or however long it feels. Her porch encloses her dying husband, breathing out of a tank, or with a tank, as if living with assistance is anything new. And I think, well, I know she was once married to a semi-famous musician; some guy responsible for some important 'new sound' during the fifties'. As the sun begins to sit, on this Virginia horizon, I swear I am as lost as my neighbor, digging around in her yard, trying to fix up the place before darkness falls. I guess we all are trying to fix stuff up before darkness falls. The birds are chirping or screaming -- you decide -- under the coal dust sky, searching for something but, probably, wandering around and around, hoping that something makes sense or presents itself. I don't know how birds work, but this is where I say something; something that we can all relate to. Something that really hits the nail on the head. But life, like poetry or teenage boys, or bloodied noses, or nonsensical stares from that girl in 8th grade you regret being afraid of, is unstable, meandering, even pointless. Oh so, disarmingly pointless.
0
Apr 16, 2017
Apr 16, 2017 at 7:51 PM UTC
7. Working Titles Never Work; Degenerates
The trees outside my neighbor's house cover shame like my neighbor's blouse. And the yard, oh my god, so perfect; so, so, so suburban you could stay safe, forever or however long it feels. Her porch encloses her dying husband, breathing out of a tank, or with a tank, as if living with assistance is anything new. And I think, well, I know she was once married to a semi-famous musician; some guy responsible for some important 'new sound' during the fifties'. As the sun begins to sit, on this Virginia horizon, I swear I am as lost as my neighbor, digging around in her yard, trying to fix up the place before darkness falls. I guess we all are trying to fix stuff up before darkness falls. The birds are chirping or screaming -- you decide -- under the coal dust sky, searching for something but, probably, wandering around and around, hoping that something makes sense or presents itself. I don't know how birds work, but this is where I say something; something that we can all relate to. Something that really hits the nail on the head. But life, like poetry or teenage boys, or bloodied noses, or nonsensical stares from that girl in 8th grade you regret being afraid of, is unstable, meandering, even pointless. Oh so, disarmingly pointless.
joshua-haines
Written by
26/M/American
Apr 16, 2017
Apr 16, 2017 at 7:51 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem