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#carrots
Whenever I would bite a carrot two things used to cross my mind My dad, and how its just as easy to bite off your own finger Now I think of you, how you hate them, how I should have bit my tongue
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May 12, 2025
May 12, 2025 at 5:42 AM UTC
Carrots (He hates them)
Carrots are killers don't ya know breaking off teeth while ya chew off to the dentist I had to go feeling the pain yes, it's true Sat in the chair the doc and hygienist my only view it took em awhile with pliers he smiled and snapped up my last wisdom too...
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Apr 29, 2020
Apr 29, 2020 at 10:50 AM UTC
Now, I'm just a wise guy, minus, my wisdom
Grand dreams beat boring reality. May you never run out.
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Jul 2, 2019
Jul 2, 2019 at 9:12 AM UTC
Imaginary Carrots (10w)
You were my friend. I was the only one at your funeral, You didn’t have many friends. I buried you myself, In my own backyard. I loved you so much! I love you still. I love you so much I wrote this poem for you. Taken so soon, It ***** you don’t live as long as we do. I hope heaven is kind to you I will never forget you! You were there when I needed you! I was there when you needed me too! But now you’re gone. I will join you again one day my friend, But until then, You can eat all the carrots that you want, Hop around in all the fields that you want. And when I arrive, We can eat all the carrots that we want, We can hop around all the fields that we want. May you rest in peace.
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Apr 18, 2019
Apr 18, 2019 at 7:39 PM UTC
For A Friend
Wimbledon’s playing on the TV in the living room. Dad and I are watching on the sofa. In the kitchen, Mom cuts carrots and cucumbers with a long blade. She slices the vegetables one by one. Orange pieces. Green pieces. I glance over Mom chops up the carrots and cucumbers without a cutting board, taking each long carrot and cucumber and slices it with precision, as though she’s a professional like the film with Natalie Portman and Jean Reno. But she’s not a little girl and she’s not a Frenchman. She’s like a mix-in-between, like the asphalt in our driveway and the grass sprouting in between the cracks. Dad is a computer engineer. He used to be an artist. Used to study technical drawing in a university in Saigon. He met mom when he was working on a play. She was the lead actress. Shakespeare had said, “All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players: they have their exits and their entrances; and one man in his time plays many parts, his acts being seven ages.” He’s right, but right now I can’t tell what act I’m in. Dad focuses on the TV. Watches Federer and Djokovic, his eyes, darting from left to right like the mood of a young boy that crosses back and forth from light to dark, and back again. Blade in hand, Mom makes longer and deeper cuts across the cucumber, cutting away the skin, leaving deep cuts in the vegetable. Dad turns his head towards her, his neck cracking like the forehand swung by Federer. He clears his throat, softly, soft as gas leaking out from a stovetop from a studio apartment, like the scene in Fight Club, a match about to be struck. Mom sets the blade down on the table, and bites her lip. Her nostrils flare. I press down on the couch arm, and stand up, my head bent, my eyes wandering to the doorway.
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Apr 28, 2016
Apr 28, 2016 at 11:29 PM UTC
Blue Tennis Court
Wimbledon’s playing on the TV in the living room. Dad and I are watching on the sofa. In the kitchen, Mom cuts carrots and cucumbers with a long blade. She slices the vegetables one by one. Orange pieces. Green pieces. I glance over Mom chops up the carrots and cucumbers without a cutting board, taking each long carrot and cucumber and slices it with precision, as though she’s a professional like the film with Natalie Portman and Jean Reno. But she’s not a little girl and she’s not a Frenchman. She’s like a mix-in-between, like the asphalt in our driveway and the grass sprouting in between the cracks. Dad is a computer engineer. He used to be an artist. Used to study technical drawing in a university in Saigon. He met mom when he was working on a play. She was the lead actress. Shakespeare had said, “All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players: they have their exits and their entrances; and one man in his time plays many parts, his acts being seven ages.” He’s right, but right now I can’t tell what act I’m in. Dad focuses on the TV. Watches Federer and Djokovic, his eyes, darting from left to right like the mood of a young boy that crosses back and forth from light to dark, and back again. Blade in hand, Mom makes longer and deeper cuts across the cucumber, cutting away the skin, leaving deep cuts in the vegetable. Dad turns his head towards her, his neck cracking like the forehand swung by Federer. He clears his throat, softly, soft as gas leaking out from a stovetop from a studio apartment, like the scene in Fight Club, a match about to be struck. Mom sets the blade down on the table, and bites her lip. Her nostrils flare. I press down on the couch arm, and stand up, my head bent, my eyes wandering to the doorway.
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10
When I was a child, I fondly remember eating carrots from  the dirt of our garden. My brother, my sister, and I would pull the carrots, with great care, from the dirt of our garden. We would wash them sometimes in the sink, sometimes with the hose, to remove the dirt of our garden. But even then as we chewed those carrots we could still sometimes taste the dirt of our garden.
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Feb 18, 2016
Feb 18, 2016 at 3:47 PM UTC
The Dirt of Our Garden
My eyes are drawn toward your toes as frequently as lover’s eyes do meet and tie their souls in knots. Your toes that grasp and stretch and lift you up to reach the chocolate chips you keep behind the chia seeds. Your toes that press and push and dig into dirt and earth then sheets at 3 when warm air beckons— take a nap my eyes are drawn toward your toes and glide over freckled skin that makes me scramble after memories, past parted lips and perfect cheeks to lurid pools of cerulean that find us back in bed by noon.
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Dec 19, 2015
Dec 19, 2015 at 5:34 PM UTC
November 10, 9:38pm, Cutting Carrots
Must be from France , western European . Dedicated equestrian , painter and poet . Aristocratic by blood , proper family . Well educated in all the facets of life . Regal as the diamond jewels of the tiara worn like a crown . Long black hair waterfalls over her shoulders . Rose red lips that beg to be kissed . Perfectly structured cheeks And the round innocent eyes Of an angel seeking wings to fly . And if the eyes are the windows to the soul let my ship sail on in Seeking safe harbor within Sneha's eyes .
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Feb 6, 2015
Feb 6, 2015 at 7:24 PM UTC
Sneha's Eyes
there is something beautiful about a memory that reaches from the pit of your stomach latches onto your heart and pulls it under your lungs placing you in a moment that once saturated the marrow of your bones when you close your eyes you can feel, see, and be just as it was with carrots, a park bench, the night sky, a bottle of spanish wine and his arms cradling you against the chilling wind it takes you so deeply into the inscription he carelessly carved across the back of your eyes that when you open them again and exhale you find it fogging the midsummer air releasing the very breaths you took by his side
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May 5, 2014
May 5, 2014 at 12:07 AM UTC
Careless Memory