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I anticipate that on some distant roof there must be a man waving two distinct flags, so as to direct the flock of birds flying above me.  Crossing his arms, the fabric folding and slipping against itself in the wind, making a noise of snaps and swooshes and billowing. This thought suddenly makes my jacket seem oversized; the sleeves feel lengthened, drooping over my hands, as though I were still a child at play, putting on father's army jacket on Sunday morning before church; him in a dress shirt and black suspenders, shaving in front of the steamy bathroom mirror. And I notice that I can see my breath as it escapes the sauna of my insides. It disperses into the February air— no man waving flags on a distant roof somewhere to keep its molecules from scattering in every direction.
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Aug 9, 2010
Aug 9, 2010 at 12:05 AM UTC
On Losing a Loved One
I anticipate that on some distant roof there must be a man waving two distinct flags, so as to direct the flock of birds flying above me.  Crossing his arms, the fabric folding and slipping against itself in the wind, making a noise of snaps and swooshes and billowing. This thought suddenly makes my jacket seem oversized; the sleeves feel lengthened, drooping over my hands, as though I were still a child at play, putting on father's army jacket on Sunday morning before church; him in a dress shirt and black suspenders, shaving in front of the steamy bathroom mirror. And I notice that I can see my breath as it escapes the sauna of my insides. It disperses into the February air— no man waving flags on a distant roof somewhere to keep its molecules from scattering in every direction.
Ira-Desmond
Written by
42/M/American
Aug 9, 2010
Aug 9, 2010 at 12:05 AM UTC
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