Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
#incredulity
My words are born Of self-absorption This eagerness for Transmogrification of A self that constantly fails At this project of conception... To understand the world -- This grand undertaking Nothing but motions of futility Yet I can't comply I cannot submit For I am the personification Of incredulity.
0
Aug 31, 2020
Aug 31, 2020 at 11:33 AM UTC
The Skeptic
I sit here on a metal chair hunched over, my head in my hands I feel incredulous unable to wrap my mind around being in this chamber of fools with the others who came here as slaves of a monster master. But each of us came with a captor within who led us here in chains. So here I am hiding my head under a hood of shame. I gave up my freedom with each seemingly harmless fix and step by step I led myself into the custody of this man across from me. Just this little bit won’t hurt, I told myself. And before long that trickle became a roaring ravine - me in the middle desperate to keep my head above water. The counselor sat there silently with a look on his face that said “Man, this is serious as a heart attack.” But I’m not a ****** addict like the rest of these guys, I thought to myself. I shouldn’t be here. And still he sat there, silent, watching me cry, sniveling like a baby. This is not me I thought but here I am in my body without the comfort or warmth of a caring arm around my shoulders. Alone. Humiliated.
0
Mar 27, 2018
Mar 27, 2018 at 11:27 AM UTC
In Custody
The poet looks and delves. She wonders if he ever stops, him, this rushing-forward-breathlessly train, if he did park himself in fantastical paragraphs; the poet is dumbfounded at him ceasing. In construction sites of grammar, where free ideas float in ruins, poet wonders how, how, how he came to plan to live up to an exclamation mark. And condensed so many dribbles and strikes of strange and fruitful, even withered paragraphs into one line and pointer - a smile and a lope-stagger dance of a walk - an exclamation mark. The poet stares, once again astounded by the little streaks of the universe and longs to hold on to something. Disarmed, she can't quite put a finger on it, his gaping honesty and his quiet one, that contradiction shouting in her face while whispering in her eyes. The poet laughs - laughs of, in, out of sleep. Summer is here. And she chooses to notice. He laughs too, but he's always been noticing and the poet writes down how she learnt to bite and chew into the fruit of the world and taste it sour runny sweet cold explosive lingering just as him. The poet saw all colours rolling in one strange song of limbs. She did not like the music but she made herself a blank white canvas and listened and laughed clean, silly laughs fluting out of the incongruity of simple, simple moments. Fun life, easy stretch of the mouth - it is possible to smile down at what a clown pain is. He declares this boldly without saying a word or two. The poet is dumbfounded at him being. She did not see and had not seen and now only began to picture but she was blind. He said he was blinder and that was true. The poet did not smirk but giggle at the irony - he lived in pop-bold spectacles, she slept in black and white films. But both were blind. We cannot see and we are blurs. The poet likes that life scrapes away at her because she can see chinks of white sunshine through all the sheared-off layers. Clean, clean, bright, bright - he teaches her in a beam without a hello. The poet writes poetry on breathing action prose. And she laughs - You are everything I don't want but I'm curious.
0
Sep 23, 2015
Sep 23, 2015 at 5:48 PM UTC
Wide-Eyed
The poet looks and delves. She wonders if he ever stops, him, this rushing-forward-breathlessly train, if he did park himself in fantastical paragraphs; the poet is dumbfounded at him ceasing. In construction sites of grammar, where free ideas float in ruins, poet wonders how, how, how he came to plan to live up to an exclamation mark. And condensed so many dribbles and strikes of strange and fruitful, even withered paragraphs into one line and pointer - a smile and a lope-stagger dance of a walk - an exclamation mark. The poet stares, once again astounded by the little streaks of the universe and longs to hold on to something. Disarmed, she can't quite put a finger on it, his gaping honesty and his quiet one, that contradiction shouting in her face while whispering in her eyes. The poet laughs - laughs of, in, out of sleep. Summer is here. And she chooses to notice. He laughs too, but he's always been noticing and the poet writes down how she learnt to bite and chew into the fruit of the world and taste it sour runny sweet cold explosive lingering just as him. The poet saw all colours rolling in one strange song of limbs. She did not like the music but she made herself a blank white canvas and listened and laughed clean, silly laughs fluting out of the incongruity of simple, simple moments. Fun life, easy stretch of the mouth - it is possible to smile down at what a clown pain is. He declares this boldly without saying a word or two. The poet is dumbfounded at him being. She did not see and had not seen and now only began to picture but she was blind. He said he was blinder and that was true. The poet did not smirk but giggle at the irony - he lived in pop-bold spectacles, she slept in black and white films. But both were blind. We cannot see and we are blurs. The poet likes that life scrapes away at her because she can see chinks of white sunshine through all the sheared-off layers. Clean, clean, bright, bright - he teaches her in a beam without a hello. The poet writes poetry on breathing action prose. And she laughs - You are everything I don't want but I'm curious.
Continue reading...
83
Disdain and enmity, for which there is no remedy, gives acrimony inside of me, for which I have no doubt, The only way that I can see an end to animosity, is a clear and simple breaking free from shackles which hold me down. Without your burden, I can be free to surreptitiously, achieve a sense of normalcy to what was once before. Before the orders conferred to me, carried out, sans questioning, I had a life; a dream you see. But no not anymore. I used to live quite happily, free from thinking cynically of my peers along with me; Our intentions leave some doubt To what is just morally, defensible with sanity. A torn asunder effigy, of who we used to be. My name will fade from memory, a number chalked in history, regarded with incredulity that I was here at all.
0
Aug 19, 2015
Aug 19, 2015 at 6:21 PM UTC
Disdain and Cynicism; With a Dash of Incredulity