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You don't come around anymore, but I still remember making memories that never had a place existing anyways— the say heaven, hell, and purgatory don't count as long- distance still I punch in your number, listening. To the buzz on the other end, muting the television, turn down the lights, and put candles in the room; I keep your existence alive by fabrication, sewing selective memories in the lobes of my brain, but they manifest & my dreams-- are the seams of my sanity being pulled out. You're always there with a glass of lemonade. Yet, you never knew what an inside voice was, as you scream about how wonderful the afterlife is. Your proposal a tempting blade, the encouraging way you promise I'll see you- meeting the artery in my neck, or a tendon in my wrist. You know- I've done it more than once- mistake my sickness, for your ghost. I swear, I can hear your voice, all the time now. I haven't felt this sick in a long time, can't even recall the last time sleep came to me in a quiet hush, with a wash of calmness, asleep with the sky resembling a blanket of stars casted out into the atmosphere. A constant migraine hammered into my skull, everyday I burst out randomly and cry so hard until my knees quake, my sadness does not end, it folds me, unfolds me; creases me, & turns me into a paper airplane- I float. There's no tin can tied to string, I can't set out lawnchairs, and await for the Thursday, you were supposed to live to see- never comes, there's an emptiness in shuffled feet, and hatred for that surgical green color. Or when people utter "home" I think of your paralysis and the way your word's fought for meaning, in that slurred tone: "I'm going home" I've never been religious nor do I judge those who are, but I've been spiritual my whole life- the spirit knows when it dies. my skin shudders to think how they carted you off; to discover the parts of your body you had not known were betraying you, your lung's gave up and soon the breaths in your chest, had no place left in this world. Like anyone else; trying to justify why time rots hope, as it loosens our grip on reality. Awaiting your chatter as I shave my legs while, you do your make up in the faintly lit bathroom; I hated that guava pink lipstick you wore like it was your job. I loved that mauve colored one that made cherubs beg for you to hold them in your maternal arms, always having open arms for all outcasted, it was part of your charm. They say you always know when you're dying: does that make an illness, the equivalent to the heartbreak of your body knowing it has no regard to live any longer, and the crisis with mortality, that if we fend off fears and try to be stronger, then an unbeknownst curiosity for what happens. You know, we all know. We are all going to die someday. But- does your mind go when you die too? or do memories remain as something complacent that even death cannot strip the soul of?
0
Sep 8, 2017
Sep 8, 2017 at 11:10 PM UTC
The # You've Dialed Is No Longer In Service (Please Leave A Message After The Tone)
You don't come around anymore, but I still remember making memories that never had a place existing anyways— the say heaven, hell, and purgatory don't count as long- distance still I punch in your number, listening. To the buzz on the other end, muting the television, turn down the lights, and put candles in the room; I keep your existence alive by fabrication, sewing selective memories in the lobes of my brain, but they manifest & my dreams-- are the seams of my sanity being pulled out. You're always there with a glass of lemonade. Yet, you never knew what an inside voice was, as you scream about how wonderful the afterlife is. Your proposal a tempting blade, the encouraging way you promise I'll see you- meeting the artery in my neck, or a tendon in my wrist. You know- I've done it more than once- mistake my sickness, for your ghost. I swear, I can hear your voice, all the time now. I haven't felt this sick in a long time, can't even recall the last time sleep came to me in a quiet hush, with a wash of calmness, asleep with the sky resembling a blanket of stars casted out into the atmosphere. A constant migraine hammered into my skull, everyday I burst out randomly and cry so hard until my knees quake, my sadness does not end, it folds me, unfolds me; creases me, & turns me into a paper airplane- I float. There's no tin can tied to string, I can't set out lawnchairs, and await for the Thursday, you were supposed to live to see- never comes, there's an emptiness in shuffled feet, and hatred for that surgical green color. Or when people utter "home" I think of your paralysis and the way your word's fought for meaning, in that slurred tone: "I'm going home" I've never been religious nor do I judge those who are, but I've been spiritual my whole life- the spirit knows when it dies. my skin shudders to think how they carted you off; to discover the parts of your body you had not known were betraying you, your lung's gave up and soon the breaths in your chest, had no place left in this world. Like anyone else; trying to justify why time rots hope, as it loosens our grip on reality. Awaiting your chatter as I shave my legs while, you do your make up in the faintly lit bathroom; I hated that guava pink lipstick you wore like it was your job. I loved that mauve colored one that made cherubs beg for you to hold them in your maternal arms, always having open arms for all outcasted, it was part of your charm. They say you always know when you're dying: does that make an illness, the equivalent to the heartbreak of your body knowing it has no regard to live any longer, and the crisis with mortality, that if we fend off fears and try to be stronger, then an unbeknownst curiosity for what happens. You know, we all know. We are all going to die someday. But- does your mind go when you die too? or do memories remain as something complacent that even death cannot strip the soul of?
nucherub
Written by
25/F/Iowa
Sep 8, 2017
Sep 8, 2017 at 11:10 PM UTC
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