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There is a chart that I keep locked away in a dark wooden box in the shadows of my heart (for I have always loved a secret place) and on this worn and folded page I marked years ago the places in the sky that lead me home, the exact pattern in the clouds when my hands are strongest, every place that I have ever become a tragedy and in that box I keep the commandments that came from the fire you lit before me, scorching my feet, teaching me to be afraid of anything that burns too brightly; you wove a heavy web of chains, chains of whispered hints (don’t speak too loudly, don’t laugh when he smiles, don’t show your legs, don’t be so strong, don’t ask, don’t take, don’t be, don’t burn) and I never realized how far your echoes would travel, how long my bones would be vibrating with them and how hard it is to hear my own melody through the din. I am a ship begging to be sunk, to rest beneath the dark in the serene waves out of sight and besides, what is life’s poetry without a few shipwrecks? Little seashell girl, little high tower green glass girl, I won’t pretend that you didn’t do some damage with your yawning silence, with your neat black and white and rage hate poetry but I learned to tread water and I learned that silver words and hard hands and a friend in the mirror can heal the burns and build armor and learn every mountain peak of my heart, and the way the man himself wrote only of his valley, I have learned to conjure magic out of my own landscape and after every drop in this rainstorm I have realized that I am in your debt, little red eyed ash cloud girl, for this gift, for this journey on foot, for leading me in circles into the center of my own light.
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Sep 24, 2014
Sep 24, 2014 at 11:24 PM UTC
In Defense Of Pride And Poorly Healed Scars
There is a chart that I keep locked away in a dark wooden box in the shadows of my heart (for I have always loved a secret place) and on this worn and folded page I marked years ago the places in the sky that lead me home, the exact pattern in the clouds when my hands are strongest, every place that I have ever become a tragedy and in that box I keep the commandments that came from the fire you lit before me, scorching my feet, teaching me to be afraid of anything that burns too brightly; you wove a heavy web of chains, chains of whispered hints (don’t speak too loudly, don’t laugh when he smiles, don’t show your legs, don’t be so strong, don’t ask, don’t take, don’t be, don’t burn) and I never realized how far your echoes would travel, how long my bones would be vibrating with them and how hard it is to hear my own melody through the din. I am a ship begging to be sunk, to rest beneath the dark in the serene waves out of sight and besides, what is life’s poetry without a few shipwrecks? Little seashell girl, little high tower green glass girl, I won’t pretend that you didn’t do some damage with your yawning silence, with your neat black and white and rage hate poetry but I learned to tread water and I learned that silver words and hard hands and a friend in the mirror can heal the burns and build armor and learn every mountain peak of my heart, and the way the man himself wrote only of his valley, I have learned to conjure magic out of my own landscape and after every drop in this rainstorm I have realized that I am in your debt, little red eyed ash cloud girl, for this gift, for this journey on foot, for leading me in circles into the center of my own light.
annie-dumais
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Sep 24, 2014
Sep 24, 2014 at 11:24 PM UTC
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