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Fractured light cascades in.                      Flowing, ever wider, ever wilder           with each passing moment, leaving great pools of heaving color on the desk by the notebooks I refuse to keep. I. There stands a building, overrun by the very nature it once fought so proudly to keep out. It's walls hardly more than crumbled stone, it's staircase, hard white concrete interspersed with moss. You keep a cozy home here. Your beagles run about, guiding lost or lonely travelers to your warm and inviting den. II. The hallway was long, dark and under water. The people floated about still trapped frozen in the moments that must surly have been their last. At it's greatest spots the roof is so high, the tile so dense that it seems like a subway, a train station. The blue lips of the people around me seem to whisper pleasant lies. Seem to call me, as though a touch could wake them from forever sleep. The sun's rays do not touch these places.                      They do not know my works.          How could they? Why would they? They don't belong. The light breaking in are from the passing ambulances, cabs and cars. Sounds I have learned to ignore. III. We are never more pathetic than when we are swinging. Each time we hang back, we let our heads dangle. It feels like that moment when we lean our chairs back in class. Proudly stride on two legs, and know absolutely know that we are very near to death. We reach through the world around us, bending the color and light, forcing the air from our skin and our bones and we hold on to each other. We are so very near death. We are so young, so close. We swing on, and we open the same door, again and again, only to find it still closed. IV. My teeth are falling from my head. They are healthy, they are wonderful bright and shiny white, like they never are, and they are falling from gums. New ones grow in, without the irritating itch that I remember from my youth, but with bursting skin and a lack of blood. They come in immediately. When I look up there is food. So much food, the smell is so good. But my teeth, my new teeth They are too dull to chew. Soon they are falling out as well. I shove them back in, pushing them hard through the broken gums but they won't stay. I don't know why they won't stay. When I open my eyes to the dull buzz of the alarm                      My head swims, my brain reaches for the          last few remaining images. It tries to put them in order, tries to make sense of them. But nothing seems to fit. There is only me, the light, and the desk. My works are in order.
0
Nov 9, 2010
Nov 9, 2010 at 6:56 PM UTC
In dreams.
Fractured light cascades in.                      Flowing, ever wider, ever wilder           with each passing moment, leaving great pools of heaving color on the desk by the notebooks I refuse to keep. I. There stands a building, overrun by the very nature it once fought so proudly to keep out. It's walls hardly more than crumbled stone, it's staircase, hard white concrete interspersed with moss. You keep a cozy home here. Your beagles run about, guiding lost or lonely travelers to your warm and inviting den. II. The hallway was long, dark and under water. The people floated about still trapped frozen in the moments that must surly have been their last. At it's greatest spots the roof is so high, the tile so dense that it seems like a subway, a train station. The blue lips of the people around me seem to whisper pleasant lies. Seem to call me, as though a touch could wake them from forever sleep. The sun's rays do not touch these places.                      They do not know my works.          How could they? Why would they? They don't belong. The light breaking in are from the passing ambulances, cabs and cars. Sounds I have learned to ignore. III. We are never more pathetic than when we are swinging. Each time we hang back, we let our heads dangle. It feels like that moment when we lean our chairs back in class. Proudly stride on two legs, and know absolutely know that we are very near to death. We reach through the world around us, bending the color and light, forcing the air from our skin and our bones and we hold on to each other. We are so very near death. We are so young, so close. We swing on, and we open the same door, again and again, only to find it still closed. IV. My teeth are falling from my head. They are healthy, they are wonderful bright and shiny white, like they never are, and they are falling from gums. New ones grow in, without the irritating itch that I remember from my youth, but with bursting skin and a lack of blood. They come in immediately. When I look up there is food. So much food, the smell is so good. But my teeth, my new teeth They are too dull to chew. Soon they are falling out as well. I shove them back in, pushing them hard through the broken gums but they won't stay. I don't know why they won't stay. When I open my eyes to the dull buzz of the alarm                      My head swims, my brain reaches for the          last few remaining images. It tries to put them in order, tries to make sense of them. But nothing seems to fit. There is only me, the light, and the desk. My works are in order.
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40/American
Nov 9, 2010
Nov 9, 2010 at 6:56 PM UTC
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