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I once loved a woman so, left my wife, my young baby children, desperate desolate for a scrap of a reason to exist. her, the other woman, welcome was unquestioning, she was an answer. you may judge me, I've paid and pay on- but this is not the taken tale, verily, I have come to write. Jennifer her name, was my savior, took me from the cross unbearable, washed my feet, covered my wounds rebirthed me a new man. weak was me, fell fallow to cries, whimpers of the weak, weakened me worse and she said *go, bewitched man, magic enough to defeat the wicked one, but not the weak ones, I don't possess, you have to have metal in your mind, rock steady, maybe you do, maybe you will, but no crutch of steel can I be forever.* but this is not the taken tale, verily, I have come to write. what I remember best, the love I lost for the lesser love I gave up and took back as a lessened and lessoned man is this: *my chest, my heart, for months, not weeks, for months, not weaks of words, hurt so bad I could not believe, my life forfeit, this heartache palpable, was real beyond belief when I went to the emergency room, the doctors, stethoscope-confirmed, my tearing-warped, embodied mind, had no prescription, no surgery, for what ailed the failed man.* when in the street would see her, in the elevator trap, smelled her smell, for seconds I was triangulated, until lost sight, and was ill-mis-positioned once again in a shaft that could only go down. Shortly thereafter, took up pen and paper bad damage to repair and began to write, decades worn, pen nub'd the writing, never thereafter, stopped or ceased. now I ask you plain straight from the place of pain, that is almost healed, tho twenty years, the damages are still upon my persona claimed, for this is the taken tale, verily, I have come to write. how do you like your poet's poet now? not so much?
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Mar 17, 2014
Mar 17, 2014 at 6:44 PM UTC
I once loved a woman so
I once loved a woman so, left my wife, my young baby children, desperate desolate for a scrap of a reason to exist. her, the other woman, welcome was unquestioning, she was an answer. you may judge me, I've paid and pay on- but this is not the taken tale, verily, I have come to write. Jennifer her name, was my savior, took me from the cross unbearable, washed my feet, covered my wounds rebirthed me a new man. weak was me, fell fallow to cries, whimpers of the weak, weakened me worse and she said *go, bewitched man, magic enough to defeat the wicked one, but not the weak ones, I don't possess, you have to have metal in your mind, rock steady, maybe you do, maybe you will, but no crutch of steel can I be forever.* but this is not the taken tale, verily, I have come to write. what I remember best, the love I lost for the lesser love I gave up and took back as a lessened and lessoned man is this: *my chest, my heart, for months, not weeks, for months, not weaks of words, hurt so bad I could not believe, my life forfeit, this heartache palpable, was real beyond belief when I went to the emergency room, the doctors, stethoscope-confirmed, my tearing-warped, embodied mind, had no prescription, no surgery, for what ailed the failed man.* when in the street would see her, in the elevator trap, smelled her smell, for seconds I was triangulated, until lost sight, and was ill-mis-positioned once again in a shaft that could only go down. Shortly thereafter, took up pen and paper bad damage to repair and began to write, decades worn, pen nub'd the writing, never thereafter, stopped or ceased. now I ask you plain straight from the place of pain, that is almost healed, tho twenty years, the damages are still upon my persona claimed, for this is the taken tale, verily, I have come to write. how do you like your poet's poet now? not so much?
nat-lipstadt
Written by
99/M/NYC/Lippstadt/Kraków
Mar 17, 2014
Mar 17, 2014 at 6:44 PM UTC
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