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Sometimes I picture myself in a red prom dress, with converse under the tulle, and glitter covering my eyes as I nervously glance away from your face, inches from mine, trying not to stare at your crooked bow-tie. Sometimes we’re jumping over the tide’s foam, under the moonlight, licking the salt from our lips— my saddle shoes on the dunes, your jeans rolled above the ankle, but my curls falling loose around my face. Sometimes we’re moving black and white photographs, 1920’s with fringe and silver canes, and sometimes we’re like this. Naked on your mattress, with the ceiling fan at a standstill, sipping stale beer from old bottles you left lonely on the windowsill. And sometimes I know better, but tonight I answered your call and I came over to your lazy bones on the sunken couch, watching the lava lamp’s goo stick to the bottom, yet still lighting the entire room with a neon glow. By now, you think I would know that I can never count on you unless it’s cheap, and convenient, and broken, and me. It’s only ever me, but I can’t just haphazardly stay in the spaces of your life that need filling. I picture us, hugely, with a white house, blue shutters, little kids building towers on the porch just to knock them down. The whole bit, picture it! But all you ever see me as is figure that you can reach if you squint hard enough— a mirage that you like to believe only you will ever hold.
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Sep 29, 2014
Sep 29, 2014 at 11:38 PM UTC
Daydreams Vol. XXIV
Sometimes I picture myself in a red prom dress, with converse under the tulle, and glitter covering my eyes as I nervously glance away from your face, inches from mine, trying not to stare at your crooked bow-tie. Sometimes we’re jumping over the tide’s foam, under the moonlight, licking the salt from our lips— my saddle shoes on the dunes, your jeans rolled above the ankle, but my curls falling loose around my face. Sometimes we’re moving black and white photographs, 1920’s with fringe and silver canes, and sometimes we’re like this. Naked on your mattress, with the ceiling fan at a standstill, sipping stale beer from old bottles you left lonely on the windowsill. And sometimes I know better, but tonight I answered your call and I came over to your lazy bones on the sunken couch, watching the lava lamp’s goo stick to the bottom, yet still lighting the entire room with a neon glow. By now, you think I would know that I can never count on you unless it’s cheap, and convenient, and broken, and me. It’s only ever me, but I can’t just haphazardly stay in the spaces of your life that need filling. I picture us, hugely, with a white house, blue shutters, little kids building towers on the porch just to knock them down. The whole bit, picture it! But all you ever see me as is figure that you can reach if you squint hard enough— a mirage that you like to believe only you will ever hold.
impending series? perhaps.
sophie-herzing
Written by
Sep 29, 2014
Sep 29, 2014 at 11:38 PM UTC
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