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dear boy this is a love poem to the evening we met- not to you because love is a four-letter word that I cannot use against you yet I was texting while biking perpetually late you were sitting outside the cafe couldn’t find the door (somehow perfectly understandable) I was thinking of how I would open up the conversation, carefully wrapped in the plastic seal of Tinder ambiguity. We could be one of many things: two strangers meeting two serial killers one serial killer, one victim two humans two aliens We learned we both fell under the last title— both aliens to Rhode Island and Maine, our homeland dear boy, this is a poem to myself, so I will not forget you, you were such a gift that night, with eyes that were both kind and silly, and I was so drawn to you as I drew you, wanted to capture the seconds of the night and how they etched themselves into our skin, every line of our bodies grows darker with age sometimes I think about how wrinkles are just lines that grow onto our bodies like a sort of topography, and we perceive this as ugly topography is **** the way it undulates and defines a thing, such as a hill, rising and falling the lines spreading out like frozen sonar we didn’t have to go to the diner, but we did, didn’t even eat anything, just each other’s time and I wanted to stay there, and I wasn’t sure which I was more drawn to: the thought of us remaining
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Nov 5, 2017
Nov 5, 2017 at 11:04 AM UTC
Love letter to Friday, 5:44 pm
dear boy this is a love poem to the evening we met- not to you because love is a four-letter word that I cannot use against you yet I was texting while biking perpetually late you were sitting outside the cafe couldn’t find the door (somehow perfectly understandable) I was thinking of how I would open up the conversation, carefully wrapped in the plastic seal of Tinder ambiguity. We could be one of many things: two strangers meeting two serial killers one serial killer, one victim two humans two aliens We learned we both fell under the last title— both aliens to Rhode Island and Maine, our homeland dear boy, this is a poem to myself, so I will not forget you, you were such a gift that night, with eyes that were both kind and silly, and I was so drawn to you as I drew you, wanted to capture the seconds of the night and how they etched themselves into our skin, every line of our bodies grows darker with age sometimes I think about how wrinkles are just lines that grow onto our bodies like a sort of topography, and we perceive this as ugly topography is **** the way it undulates and defines a thing, such as a hill, rising and falling the lines spreading out like frozen sonar we didn’t have to go to the diner, but we did, didn’t even eat anything, just each other’s time and I wanted to stay there, and I wasn’t sure which I was more drawn to: the thought of us remaining
a ramble
kahara-jones-1
Written by
Nov 5, 2017
Nov 5, 2017 at 11:04 AM UTC
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