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#facemask
Under the facemask I hid my life my sorrow, my pain my love for you I save for another time But for this moment I let my tears to fall
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Jul 28, 2020
Jul 28, 2020 at 7:18 AM UTC
Facemask
it has become the daily accessory hated and loved alike sign of bad times and limited mobility by some    equanimously accepted    as yet another fashion piece for others a threatening symbol    of prescribed orders from above for many just a necessary nuisance     that will go away in time we certainly need to change our reflexes upon the sight of persons masked     before Corona          at least in our latitudes     masks were a sign of robbers and bandits     now it’s the good guys who wear them     the bad guys who don’t     and … how can we be sure of that? a real challenge to find out just from the movement of the eyebrows whether you face a friend or not
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May 25, 2020
May 25, 2020 at 2:41 PM UTC
the mask
Assume the employee smiles as you wait in line for a sanitized shopping cart. Assume she has slight imperfections in her front teeth as you do. Tiny chips from hard candy mishaps back in the early 2000s that you choose to notice while you examine your mouth in the mirror. Assume that they're eyes are telling the truth-- they didn't wake up with a fever this morning, and neither did the lady or her four kids behind you. Assume by their relaxed body language that we're all still safe from something we can't see. Assume that since your own smile is naked, somehow, you'll get out of this public place untouched. It feels like you do. You hope, anyway. Assume that the governor knows what's best when he says "It is suggested that all citizens wear facemasks, regardless if they're showing symptoms." You put the peanut butter in the cupboard and the paper plates on the counter. You wash your hands for twenty seconds, singing "Happy Birthday" twice, just like they said. You touch your face because you assume you're clean. Assuming your own risk, you pick up your phone and in a rigid, robotic fashion, your search begins. Assume you will see "out of stock" and "due to high demand," and assume that you will come up empty-handed, again. You find her though, a young girl who has made hundreds face masks to sell on her online shop. She asks you to select your pattern, and as I scan my choices, I imagine what would accompany my feverish face the best. "Cats," I say to her through a series of clicks. "Cats, and I think, I'll take the one with roses too."
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Apr 3, 2020
Apr 3, 2020 at 6:24 PM UTC
cats and roses
Assume the employee smiles as you wait in line for a sanitized shopping cart. Assume she has slight imperfections in her front teeth as you do. Tiny chips from hard candy mishaps back in the early 2000s that you choose to notice while you examine your mouth in the mirror. Assume that they're eyes are telling the truth-- they didn't wake up with a fever this morning, and neither did the lady or her four kids behind you. Assume by their relaxed body language that we're all still safe from something we can't see. Assume that since your own smile is naked, somehow, you'll get out of this public place untouched. It feels like you do. You hope, anyway. Assume that the governor knows what's best when he says "It is suggested that all citizens wear facemasks, regardless if they're showing symptoms." You put the peanut butter in the cupboard and the paper plates on the counter. You wash your hands for twenty seconds, singing "Happy Birthday" twice, just like they said. You touch your face because you assume you're clean. Assuming your own risk, you pick up your phone and in a rigid, robotic fashion, your search begins. Assume you will see "out of stock" and "due to high demand," and assume that you will come up empty-handed, again. You find her though, a young girl who has made hundreds face masks to sell on her online shop. She asks you to select your pattern, and as I scan my choices, I imagine what would accompany my feverish face the best. "Cats," I say to her through a series of clicks. "Cats, and I think, I'll take the one with roses too."
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