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In the waking, in the wrong, I stumble -- spitting synonyms for love daring the scattershot night to take control to steer me into the early morning bedroom of anyone other than my own, and over the phone breaking, over with biting the mimicking face of former promise ring holders and front pew sitters I ask the sun to emerge gently, to kiss my forehead, scramble up eggs-- wearing my oversized t-shirt, cotton underwear, and an apron left behind by the sun's mother, but as night turns and walks away, no bright sun replaces-- instead it is that grey, it is that gaunt overcast haze that never shows teeth, only hisses, "How's the routine going?" In the waking, in the wrong, hands pull denim and throat itches for shouting rebuttal, but a man never won against the eternity of the sky, so I lower my eyes, spin madly into why why whys, a beautiful woman between pavement and sky jogs past and I see myself drinking coffee with her and grinning at what our elderly parents don't know, but before the words fall from lips, her feet, legs, and hips wisp into the early morning mist, the overcast sky whispers to the meadowlark above my head, I open the door to my home as the meadowlark begins to laugh.
0
Jun 2, 2012
Jun 2, 2012 at 7:55 PM UTC
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In the waking, in the wrong, I stumble -- spitting synonyms for love daring the scattershot night to take control to steer me into the early morning bedroom of anyone other than my own, and over the phone breaking, over with biting the mimicking face of former promise ring holders and front pew sitters I ask the sun to emerge gently, to kiss my forehead, scramble up eggs-- wearing my oversized t-shirt, cotton underwear, and an apron left behind by the sun's mother, but as night turns and walks away, no bright sun replaces-- instead it is that grey, it is that gaunt overcast haze that never shows teeth, only hisses, "How's the routine going?" In the waking, in the wrong, hands pull denim and throat itches for shouting rebuttal, but a man never won against the eternity of the sky, so I lower my eyes, spin madly into why why whys, a beautiful woman between pavement and sky jogs past and I see myself drinking coffee with her and grinning at what our elderly parents don't know, but before the words fall from lips, her feet, legs, and hips wisp into the early morning mist, the overcast sky whispers to the meadowlark above my head, I open the door to my home as the meadowlark begins to laugh.
jj-hutton
Written by
American
Jun 2, 2012
Jun 2, 2012 at 7:55 PM UTC
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