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 Feb 25 enough
Vianne Lior
Wind-carved
spine twisted—feral, gnarled.
A body bent,
splintered—never severed.

Salt licked wounds raw. Brine sutured marrow.
Bark flayed to ribbons, limbs ink-blurred—
curling, unwritten. A thing undone, a thing refusing.

Roots plunged—teeth to brittle earth,
ribs against collapse.
Cliff crumbling, gravity unspooling—
but it held.

White-knuckled in ruin.
Fingers clawing the wind.
Wreckage. Crooked. Unnatural.

An old man exhaled— Survival isn’t always beautiful.

But what is beauty, if not this—
a body unmade, carved by violence,
and still, somehow, bloom?

I’m an ordinary girl
Born of ordinary parents
On an extraordinary day.

They came from ordinary people
Who lived out ordinary lives.
They never really had a lot
And seemed content with lesser.

How is it then that I was born
Always wanting something more.
Seeking that beyond the screen
Not satisfied with all at hand.

Why did I not fit the mold
That formed my sis and  brother.
It seemed to work out fine for them
But was a prison cell for me.

I bashed through those restraining walls
To seek my future my own way
Finding cliffs I could not climb
And oceans I could never swim

There was a narrow path to take
But I preferred to dance the edges
Gathering the shiny baubles
That melted in the setting Sun
And left me where I am today
Living an ordinary life

And seeking to plant Hollyhocks
Where only cactus ever grows.
                   ljm
Yep...that's me alright.
Maybe someday I will understand zero
Better than the one who discovered it before
Being zero is nothing but everything in nature
It has no presence, no existence yet existing around everywhere
It is like counting absence, a very keen difference
In precision, perfection and inevitably it becomes the truth
Everyone dissolves into one that is zero.
 Feb 25 enough
Maria
Hello, my darling! How do you feel?
What are you doing? Don’t be so shy!
Don’t worry, honey, I won’t leave you.
Come on, go into! Maybe tea with a pie?

I’ve caught sight of you for a long time.
I’ve simply kept quite about it.
And before you noticed me yourself,
I studied you whole, to be truthful of it.

I knew we’d have to go inseparably
Though life together until the end.
I won’t deny, I wasn’t thrilled with
That part of journey. But I couldn’t contend.

I realize the years take their toll.
Don’t get me wrong. I will be sad a short time.
But I am sane and I am sighted.
And I conceive in whole that mine is mine.

I won’t cry and I won’t rueful.
I’m ready to take you all with no trace.
Come in, my wrinkle. You see, I’m not boring.
Come here! And let me hug you, my Grace!
It's a sort of salutary ode to the Wrinkle. :)) I hope you'll smile as I am. :))
She danced over my desires like a light footed ballerina
tapping into my longings like an intuitive child of the seventies
Every drip of icicle sent shivers down my spine
and so I wrote her a letter, asking her to  quietly go away;
She answered me, with a whip of wind and a  halo from the sun
her summons were refreshing, like a snowflake on the tongue
Although I begged her to release her seasonal lurk on me
she gave me stretchy moments  filled with February days
She made me long for sunshine five hours every day
and as I synced my calendar,  March arrived Hurray Hurray !
Every hill of white and every snowflake bright
did eventually, fade away ....
She danced into my birthday month and gifted me the spring
and as I sat on my veranda I could hear the birdies sing
Every touch of her was gone at least for one more year
and so I wrote another letter, thanking her for her short stay !
 Feb 23 enough
Vianne Lior
No hands held. Yet—
footfalls in requiem.
Earth hums beneath them.

He trails. Watches.
Vermillion silk spills through her fingers,
each fold—a benediction,
each shade—resurrection.

Radios. Lined like relics.
Fingers ghost dials, conjuring static.
Three at home. Yet he lingers.
Lost frequencies, lost years.

Food court air—thick.
"Too much salt."
Yet her fingers, thieves of gold
steal warmth from his plate.

Flowers.
Nameless.
Still sacred.

She scoffs. He brings them.
Later, hands tremble.
Petals pressed between prayer, altar glow.

Kitchen—
war, worship.
His rotis dense as dusk,
her chai black as omen.
Knives cut too large, voices cut sharper.
Steam rises, laughter spills.
They eat—of hunger, of habit, of home.

Balcony—
where silence exhales.
She hums, porcelain waltzing.
He watches the world unravel,
stories fraying at the hem.
Threadbare.
Yet she would unravel without them.

Night.
Pills pressed into his palm.
She drifts first—breath slow, seabound.
He lingers—
memorizes rise, fall.
His fingers—finding hers.
Light. Familiar. Home.

Then—absence.

Tea—one cup, untouched.
Flowers fade.
Food court—loud, empty.
Radios mute.
Balcony still waits.

Some nights—
air quivers, hush of leaves.
A whisper, almost.

And just before sleep devours her,
her hand searches—
not for emptiness,
but the ghost of his touch.

Because even in dreams,
he promised
"I’ll find my way back to you."
Two loveliest souls—one here, one beyond. Love lingers, even in absence.
Thy glorious life I now possess,
is just nothing but a sort of mess—
and all those things I dreamed before,
are now nightmares sliding ashore.

It is human's nature, to adapt and change
but we weren't informed it would be out of our range—
for childhood is a fancy thing we've all enjoyed,
while adult things are far down this deceptive void.

How come we make children believe in fairytales
and not let them know about these nightmares and blues?
Life is not just about joyous songs of nightingales—
please give them facts and useful clues!

We are all nothing but earthlings trying to thrive,
and we are all nothing but people trying to survive—
We are all just lost adults on a lonely sea,
trying to make things work and make ourselves free;
on these unannounced and uninvited guests of adulthood, which decides if we'll be great or just up to no good—
but nonetheless, it's still marvelous to be here;
we never know the next and what's beyond there.
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