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I could tell that you had smoked a cigarette yesterday before I saw you because your shirt smelled like smoke and your lips tasted like lung cancer.  (I like to to pretend that it doesn’t really bother me that this is not the only connection you have with my father.) My parents, my sister, and you, my darling, all have green eyes.  Green like miniature earths turning in space, like Lake Michigan capsizing, like the summer leaves in the woods behind my house.   Sometimes I think that I’m more closely related to my grandparents because when I turned down the emeralds, I was given sapphires to use as kaleidoscopes instead. And, you know, my father called me a month ago and wished me luck “in the big city” and I still do not know if that means he knows where I am or not; I have not heard from my mother in over five years.   (I like to pretend that your relationship with your parents is much easier than mine.) Do you remember that time when you told me that                        “everyone sins?” I do not think that you took into account the amount of which we all sin.  (All sinners are equal, but some are more equal than others.)  Sometimes I think that the Viking blood inside of me makes sure that I identify with the villains            more than            the heroes. Sometimes I think that                                             you are the hero. But, darling, there so many things I tip toe around when it comes to you, and I am not sure why—religion, politics; the Chernobyl boy, the inked boy, my father, my mother; the moths that live inside my gut, the layer of dust over my limbic system. I wish that I had the words to say that I can never be what you want, what my family wants, what anyone wants. I wish that I could tell you how I think I am drowning in the in the gene pool, how I am convinced that I’ve broken three bones without actually breaking them, how I lay awake at night, scared to death that my dreamcatcher will stop working and that the nightmares will finally catch up with me. There are broken wishbones in my bed that I keep as trophies of losing to luck and blood stains on my clothes from all the lambs that I’ve been forced to slaughter. All I want to do is tell you why I prefer cigar smoke            to            cigarette smoke and how I would rather have you quit all together than live another day knowing that you’re dying faster than me. But darling, I watched the world spin last night when I opened my eyes and looked at you looking at me, and for now, it’ll do.  You can be the nightlight in the corner of my room. Wait for me in my chrysalis. Listen to my wings flutter.
0
Oct 6, 2014
Oct 6, 2014 at 3:03 AM UTC
Eclipse
I could tell that you had smoked a cigarette yesterday before I saw you because your shirt smelled like smoke and your lips tasted like lung cancer.  (I like to to pretend that it doesn’t really bother me that this is not the only connection you have with my father.) My parents, my sister, and you, my darling, all have green eyes.  Green like miniature earths turning in space, like Lake Michigan capsizing, like the summer leaves in the woods behind my house.   Sometimes I think that I’m more closely related to my grandparents because when I turned down the emeralds, I was given sapphires to use as kaleidoscopes instead. And, you know, my father called me a month ago and wished me luck “in the big city” and I still do not know if that means he knows where I am or not; I have not heard from my mother in over five years.   (I like to pretend that your relationship with your parents is much easier than mine.) Do you remember that time when you told me that                        “everyone sins?” I do not think that you took into account the amount of which we all sin.  (All sinners are equal, but some are more equal than others.)  Sometimes I think that the Viking blood inside of me makes sure that I identify with the villains            more than            the heroes. Sometimes I think that                                             you are the hero. But, darling, there so many things I tip toe around when it comes to you, and I am not sure why—religion, politics; the Chernobyl boy, the inked boy, my father, my mother; the moths that live inside my gut, the layer of dust over my limbic system. I wish that I had the words to say that I can never be what you want, what my family wants, what anyone wants. I wish that I could tell you how I think I am drowning in the in the gene pool, how I am convinced that I’ve broken three bones without actually breaking them, how I lay awake at night, scared to death that my dreamcatcher will stop working and that the nightmares will finally catch up with me. There are broken wishbones in my bed that I keep as trophies of losing to luck and blood stains on my clothes from all the lambs that I’ve been forced to slaughter. All I want to do is tell you why I prefer cigar smoke            to            cigarette smoke and how I would rather have you quit all together than live another day knowing that you’re dying faster than me. But darling, I watched the world spin last night when I opened my eyes and looked at you looking at me, and for now, it’ll do.  You can be the nightlight in the corner of my room. Wait for me in my chrysalis. Listen to my wings flutter.
familial and boy and introspective drabbles.
taylor-st-onge
Written by
F/American
Oct 6, 2014
Oct 6, 2014 at 3:03 AM UTC
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