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#near-death
Echoes first quiet, a pitch that hounds can barely hear.
 Gently coaxing her. "Come now, no one has to know, just give in dear."

 Blues and reds spinning. Sirens scream.

 So much better and yet so much worse. 

Trying to beg. But no, they're tuned out. 
I don't know any other route,
I still can't tell, no voice to shout.

 They're all deaf! Please God, open just one ear.
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Jul 15, 2016
Jul 15, 2016 at 11:46 AM UTC
Cold Fear (On The Night Bus)
I never got to know who I would really be. The day was pure, I went to play and lift me brown-eyed brave; I never got to know who I would really be. My cousin was not home, but his father was, who offered to show curious me something; I never got to know who I would really be. Taking my hand, up we went into that shadowed bedroom; I never got to know who I would really be. There I cried and nearly died as breath and trust drained away, and then he finished; I never got to know who I would really be. With all my four-year might, I barely stood, trembling friendless for a lifetime, waiting and wishing for the end of me that never came, frozen by the echoes of his whistling; I never got to know who I would really be. My light and trust twisted numb, and I became, in that sacrificial horror, unwantedly wise; I never got to know who I would really be. My nature heart and caring head left for other worlds, replaced by unwanted imitations, strange deliveries from the unknown; I never got to know who I would really be. The rest of my life unfolded in starker silence, hidden tears, and lurking fears, later liberated for short, surprised, and sublime times by the fairest love of two women, safe children, their adoring little ones, and a few determined adventures now and then, hinting of the lost; I never got to know who I would really be. But now I write it all, and from my defiant and disobedient depth consider, when I can, what imagining did for me and never came true, to stand and say and show who I have become anyway. This is my private anthem to my beloved self, though I never got to know who that boy might really be.
0
Apr 25, 2015
Apr 25, 2015 at 11:42 PM UTC
I Never Got to Know
I never got to know who I would really be. The day was pure, I went to play and lift me brown-eyed brave; I never got to know who I would really be. My cousin was not home, but his father was, who offered to show curious me something; I never got to know who I would really be. Taking my hand, up we went into that shadowed bedroom; I never got to know who I would really be. There I cried and nearly died as breath and trust drained away, and then he finished; I never got to know who I would really be. With all my four-year might, I barely stood, trembling friendless for a lifetime, waiting and wishing for the end of me that never came, frozen by the echoes of his whistling; I never got to know who I would really be. My light and trust twisted numb, and I became, in that sacrificial horror, unwantedly wise; I never got to know who I would really be. My nature heart and caring head left for other worlds, replaced by unwanted imitations, strange deliveries from the unknown; I never got to know who I would really be. The rest of my life unfolded in starker silence, hidden tears, and lurking fears, later liberated for short, surprised, and sublime times by the fairest love of two women, safe children, their adoring little ones, and a few determined adventures now and then, hinting of the lost; I never got to know who I would really be. But now I write it all, and from my defiant and disobedient depth consider, when I can, what imagining did for me and never came true, to stand and say and show who I have become anyway. This is my private anthem to my beloved self, though I never got to know who that boy might really be.
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More than one person remembers that day as hot and tasting of catastrophe in the flavor of airbag dust and gasoline. We were talking as you drank your root beer. Windows down. My shoes off… 4:02. Your eyes widen as metal screeches and the revving of engines winds down, a man wearing sunglasses yanks on my door, but it protrudes into the cab. Another man takes you out — shouts to me to move. I can’t find my shoes and my wallet is soaked. Bystanders flock like they would at a circus where a lion’s attacked his tamer. Tears flow more freely than blood. I’m sorry, I’m sorry. God, my fault spills from my bruised lips until finally, I collapse to the pavement like the fender of the opposing Mercedes. I tried but failed to explain that swerving the car to save you meant near-death for me. Only after regret and responsibility that crushed my lungs faded, the way mascara dries, did I acknowledge, I am here.
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Nov 18, 2014
Nov 18, 2014 at 9:38 PM UTC
Liability
Today for the first time I felt my own mortality. Before, I went through life deliberately ignoring death and its couriers absently aware but blind to the dangers of life. Today I realized that life is nothing but a quest to escape death neverending, never ending until that day when everything stops. Before today I never had to evaluate my life in a split second but today I had to remember anything and decide (not like I had a choice) if I was ready or not. Twelve more inches and who knows what I would be saying now.
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Nov 13, 2014
Nov 13, 2014 at 12:34 AM UTC
Mack Meets Alabama