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In a dream I walked  through a small town in winter, snow was drifted all around, building after building was dark,  empty window shops, abandoned. At the heart of a naked strip mall there was a tiny boutique, Chinatown style. Cheap throw away electronics, plywood guitars, plastic purses fast-food clothing, and wall to wall glass cases. It strikes me now, it was not a shop but a museum, filled with relics of the oh-too-recent past. Homemade cassette mix tapes, with pink bedazzled stars, and neat hand written script, zip disk encylopedias, mildewed black moleskines, and much more, the mind it could not take it all in. I was wrenched from this museum, back into the waking world by a full bladder, and a cold crown. I slipped on a cap, but I hold it in, desperately I try to convey  the frozen tragedy I have witnessed, with moist unblinking mind's eyes. The shadowy windswept streets, the random half broken neon signs, the peeling sky blue painted storefront, and the tiny boutique, a dream place, that could only ever afford to pay the rent in the depths of my subconscious. It strikes me, that I am blessed to be a tail-end-member, of Generation X, the last generation that can remember the corpse before it died, to have watched it die. To have lived through this death, to have watched the desiccation and to have seen the dead body ***** by heartless robots, to give birth to a Mummy Earth, a world without a soul. Soon I will be forced to go downstairs and relieve myself, on the ground outside For now, I lie on my side, thumb typing, shoulder aching,  from supporting my weight, sore eyes assaulted by the too-bright-white screen. I lie here, trying to capture it;  the feeling of strangled despair. Not for myself, but for the children who have inherited a dead cyborg, devoid of its humanity. A corpse culture, with perfect teeth, glistening hair, fair skin, cloudy eyes, and the faint stench of moldy leather and spoiled spices. They do not know what it is like to feel, to have beauty ripped from their desperate dream hands, like children dragged away from their arrested mother. They inhabit a foster home for the spiritually bankrupt, the true tragedy is they don't know any better.
0
Apr 22, 2017
Apr 22, 2017 at 1:48 PM UTC
Mummy Earth
In a dream I walked  through a small town in winter, snow was drifted all around, building after building was dark,  empty window shops, abandoned. At the heart of a naked strip mall there was a tiny boutique, Chinatown style. Cheap throw away electronics, plywood guitars, plastic purses fast-food clothing, and wall to wall glass cases. It strikes me now, it was not a shop but a museum, filled with relics of the oh-too-recent past. Homemade cassette mix tapes, with pink bedazzled stars, and neat hand written script, zip disk encylopedias, mildewed black moleskines, and much more, the mind it could not take it all in. I was wrenched from this museum, back into the waking world by a full bladder, and a cold crown. I slipped on a cap, but I hold it in, desperately I try to convey  the frozen tragedy I have witnessed, with moist unblinking mind's eyes. The shadowy windswept streets, the random half broken neon signs, the peeling sky blue painted storefront, and the tiny boutique, a dream place, that could only ever afford to pay the rent in the depths of my subconscious. It strikes me, that I am blessed to be a tail-end-member, of Generation X, the last generation that can remember the corpse before it died, to have watched it die. To have lived through this death, to have watched the desiccation and to have seen the dead body ***** by heartless robots, to give birth to a Mummy Earth, a world without a soul. Soon I will be forced to go downstairs and relieve myself, on the ground outside For now, I lie on my side, thumb typing, shoulder aching,  from supporting my weight, sore eyes assaulted by the too-bright-white screen. I lie here, trying to capture it;  the feeling of strangled despair. Not for myself, but for the children who have inherited a dead cyborg, devoid of its humanity. A corpse culture, with perfect teeth, glistening hair, fair skin, cloudy eyes, and the faint stench of moldy leather and spoiled spices. They do not know what it is like to feel, to have beauty ripped from their desperate dream hands, like children dragged away from their arrested mother. They inhabit a foster home for the spiritually bankrupt, the true tragedy is they don't know any better.
Word wrap ruins all of my poems. **** this place. Do you word wrap Shakespeare, Eliot?
senor-negativo
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Apr 22, 2017
Apr 22, 2017 at 1:48 PM UTC
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