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#birdhouse
Birdhouses made of wood, crafted by men. Wooden home, in the wooden branch of the tree, how silly! To falsely aid what did not need it, Is a jesters understanding of altruism.
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Jan 26
Jan 26, 2026 at 10:44 AM UTC
Jester's Altruism
For some, poetry comes naturally But for me its like carpentry It takes nails, wood, glue, and time To build these words that hopefully rhyme In the end I hope these walls survive So the beauty that lives within will thrive To grow into ones colorful crest To inspire fledgling poets building their first nest.
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Jun 26, 2018
Jun 26, 2018 at 3:59 PM UTC
Birdhouse
Because he was the robin, see I built him a birdhouse made of the fingernails I chipped from every time I was forced to button up my own flannel shirt It was quite silly and awkward-looking So it didn't bother me when he didn't want to live there It would take a lot of fake smiles and wooden blinds to tolerate a habitation such as the one I constructed for him So it didn't bother me when he didn't want to live there When he told me he was making a nest I took a paring knife from the kitchen drawer When he told me he was making a nest I gave him 10 inches of weave to (through) the twigs When he told me there were lots of split ends and varied shades I wasn't too hurt because it was true And I knew he would use twisty ties from bread bags instead Which were much more practical than 10 inches of lover's hair I just couldn't understand why he didn't give it back He misplaced it, he said How can you misplace something I had (longed) for him
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Jan 3, 2013
Jan 3, 2013 at 3:12 AM UTC
ungrateful naivety (perhaps)
I  used to be your birdhouse. I could coax you out from your seat in the treetops from behind the camouflaging greens and watch you edge out shyly with the wind ruffling your blush feathers. You'd cling to me when the spring showers started falling and I could keep you safe and dry, I could always do that. I'd be there to hear your youthful songs, and I'd whisper back in a language just we knew and then I'd hug you goodbye and watch you step precariously from my perch, flapping in the wind, unsure, unaccustomed. and  I'd be there for you the next day and the next because I thought you'd still need me. I never thought I'd see you, the point of a flying V soaring with your head held high, not even glancing down at my tired wooden walls and faded empty perch.
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Jun 6, 2014
Jun 6, 2014 at 1:32 PM UTC
your birdhouse