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Pigeons are water-birds carved from stoicism. When feet approach, they disperse, reconnect, and continue, leaving me completely perplexed. I can never tell the difference between their calling of mate and battle for territory. Both actions are so absurdly similar. I watch for days, chasing them and their thirty-yard flights with my coffee in-hand. I've traveled to the Rockies of Colorado from the ***** Lower East Side of Manhattan by rusted, dring-belled and horned bicycle. Cool winds helped sail me across forest trails and I slept, albeit briefly, on park bench ports; they attract my current muses and, in turn, me. These winter-jacketed birds tend to puff up and coo and dance in front of one another defending their plumage, their right to be, where they are, for what fills them whole. One will stare at another, the other never looks back. One will bump another, the other never touches back. One will chase the Other and then gently caress its wings, as if to stab, "Stay a while, partake in the sidewalk feast." One wants in, the other out; they both want in so I'll be headed home now.
0
Feb 28, 2013
Feb 28, 2013 at 9:35 PM UTC
Coincidences Are Not Coincidental
Pigeons are water-birds carved from stoicism. When feet approach, they disperse, reconnect, and continue, leaving me completely perplexed. I can never tell the difference between their calling of mate and battle for territory. Both actions are so absurdly similar. I watch for days, chasing them and their thirty-yard flights with my coffee in-hand. I've traveled to the Rockies of Colorado from the ***** Lower East Side of Manhattan by rusted, dring-belled and horned bicycle. Cool winds helped sail me across forest trails and I slept, albeit briefly, on park bench ports; they attract my current muses and, in turn, me. These winter-jacketed birds tend to puff up and coo and dance in front of one another defending their plumage, their right to be, where they are, for what fills them whole. One will stare at another, the other never looks back. One will bump another, the other never touches back. One will chase the Other and then gently caress its wings, as if to stab, "Stay a while, partake in the sidewalk feast." One wants in, the other out; they both want in so I'll be headed home now.
joseph-valle
Written by
American
Feb 28, 2013
Feb 28, 2013 at 9:35 PM UTC
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