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#tundra
in the arctic air the sins of the tundra are absolved in passing
0
Aug 20, 2020
Aug 20, 2020 at 9:22 AM UTC
Purga
I miss the way that you used to fight a smile, with your eyebrows raised and mouth slightly parted-- And I miss the way the tundra crunched when I walked on it in spring, still frozen-- But that doesn't mean that I would still love you the same. When I say that I miss you, I mean I miss being able to listen to certain songs without getting sad being able to drive down every road without being flooded with memories of a time we loved one another. When I say I miss home I mean I miss the feeling of comfort the emptiness brought. Being able to look through childhood pictures without crying. And my biggest fear of all is seeing you again and realizing you're not the same, and neither am I. And the love isn't there. Or going home and knowing, it isn't how I left it and I've changed too. It doesn't bring me happiness like it used to. When comparing things that you miss, you start to realize: even if you meet again, the person won't be the same one that loved you. Just like even when you go home again, it won't be the same place you once craved.
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Feb 26, 2020
Feb 26, 2020 at 12:55 AM UTC
When Comparing Things You Miss
Awash in dancing sea glass light I watch the ocean late at night But I have never been The only ocean that I know Is filled with wintry frozen snow That God did not intend I wander cross it in a fright While tripping often as it’s night And slipping on the snow An owl wings above my head Reminding me of seagulls led By merchants to the coast A barrel loaded to the brim And sailors singing salty hymns Assault my ears and nose I grasp the rough hewn timber rail And hear the snapping of the sail Among the clapping waves The salty air upon my tongue Turns dark and rough and then we plunge Upon a pitching swell A glowing branch lights up the sky I see it though I’ve closed my eyes And shines upon some hell I know it from my darkest fears And shun such moaning from my ears All thought has lost its perch Wait, no more am I staring out Aloof, aghast, about to shout Now I see ice-glazed birch They shiver slightly with the cold A breeze picks up and takes its hold On sounds from far away A quiet whisper fills my head The voice that wracks a soul with dread And grabs me by the feet I stand there frozen to my spot But seeing only driftwood rot And float away from me The icy hand that grasped my throat And pricked my skin and thinned my coat Now plays his lilting harp I fall into a deepened sleep His lullaby like counting sheep And nod off in the snow When I awake, a tropic storm Has thundered in to greet with warm But hellish gusts of air
0
Jan 13, 2020
Jan 13, 2020 at 6:07 PM UTC
Tundra
The bitter road With walking feet and identical pace Fear not For they are all just shadows underneath Just ghosts beneath the turquoise ice Quiet as can be And you will not fall You will not falter As you have colder blood within your veins Than in every surreal arctic peace
0
Aug 16, 2019
Aug 16, 2019 at 9:54 AM UTC
Tundra
The Spring detests the girl with the ivory complexion, dollops of rosy flesh sunk against her face like discarded peach pits (and discarded is she. forgotten is she). Mother Nature's Alabaster ******* they've dubbed her. And tried Mother Nature to preach tranquillity to her daughter, a reminder to always keep still amidst any tempest ****** into her path.   But mother, I am the tempest. Come tomorrow morning, the spring snow will have melted, but frigid I shall remain. Dissonant and storm-wrenched I shall remain. All the world begins to thaw as I loll about in the tundra of this loneliness. When dawn arrives, I will draw the curtains before the rising sun shoots me that beam of apocalyptic grin. The world is not ending, you will tell me (but mine is). I have always existed separately from the rest, you see. The bright evenings and the even brighter mornings. The unmistakably poignant scent of freshly-cut grass. Marmalade sunsets that descend effortlessly into their celestial counterparts. Flowers blossoming to profound vibrancy. I wish I could tell the flowers it is only a matter of time before some wandering child will rip apart their petals in a ruthless game of “He Loves Me He Loves Me Not.” (Child, I Know this game all too well— the perils of picking an even number of petals). And it is only a matter of time before autumn dolls out its wiltings. I am also well accustomed to the art of wilting, you know. The only difference between me and the sunflowers is that the spring belongs to them. It is the epoch of renewal, of second chances in spite of their inevitable witherings, both past and future. But the present-- the spring-- it will always belong to them. I know not how it feels to heal alongside the sunflowers. I know not what it means to shed the prospect of death even if it is only temporary. My heart is caught in an impenetrable limbo. Tell me Mother Nature, how do I move on? For letting go seems a foreign enigma to me. So, really, what else am I to do but draw the curtains each sunrise? As I am left to weather the deluge while all the world blooms, as I am left to pour, I desperately await the rain. For it is only in the rain that I shall return home.
0
Apr 21, 2019
Apr 21, 2019 at 10:44 PM UTC
Equinox
The Spring detests the girl with the ivory complexion, dollops of rosy flesh sunk against her face like discarded peach pits (and discarded is she. forgotten is she). Mother Nature's Alabaster ******* they've dubbed her. And tried Mother Nature to preach tranquillity to her daughter, a reminder to always keep still amidst any tempest ****** into her path.   But mother, I am the tempest. Come tomorrow morning, the spring snow will have melted, but frigid I shall remain. Dissonant and storm-wrenched I shall remain. All the world begins to thaw as I loll about in the tundra of this loneliness. When dawn arrives, I will draw the curtains before the rising sun shoots me that beam of apocalyptic grin. The world is not ending, you will tell me (but mine is). I have always existed separately from the rest, you see. The bright evenings and the even brighter mornings. The unmistakably poignant scent of freshly-cut grass. Marmalade sunsets that descend effortlessly into their celestial counterparts. Flowers blossoming to profound vibrancy. I wish I could tell the flowers it is only a matter of time before some wandering child will rip apart their petals in a ruthless game of “He Loves Me He Loves Me Not.” (Child, I Know this game all too well— the perils of picking an even number of petals). And it is only a matter of time before autumn dolls out its wiltings. I am also well accustomed to the art of wilting, you know. The only difference between me and the sunflowers is that the spring belongs to them. It is the epoch of renewal, of second chances in spite of their inevitable witherings, both past and future. But the present-- the spring-- it will always belong to them. I know not how it feels to heal alongside the sunflowers. I know not what it means to shed the prospect of death even if it is only temporary. My heart is caught in an impenetrable limbo. Tell me Mother Nature, how do I move on? For letting go seems a foreign enigma to me. So, really, what else am I to do but draw the curtains each sunrise? As I am left to weather the deluge while all the world blooms, as I am left to pour, I desperately await the rain. For it is only in the rain that I shall return home.
Continue reading...
115
It’s the hunger that drives the Wolf and I out— all across the icy expanse of tundra. We stop at the edge. Just for a moment. One look into each other's eyes, both of us knowing the other doesn’t taste very good. And so it begins.
0
Apr 5, 2019
Apr 5, 2019 at 11:47 PM UTC
It’s The Hunger
Indigenous knowledge and unwritten tradition Ritual dances and pagan gods She speaks to the deads Heals the deepest wound Whispers to the reindeers But one day people with skins, the colour of snow, came Untouched by her wisdom Nothing she could do to stop them The land was soiled Purity went away
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Feb 20, 2019
Feb 20, 2019 at 11:27 AM UTC
The Shaman
she was a tundra the photos were so pretty but now you miss home
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Oct 22, 2018
Oct 22, 2018 at 12:50 PM UTC
tundra
The tundra drips Wild West like bad cinematography in theaters emptied out like popcorn bags Desolation finds me staying warm My blood may be the only boiling hope in this land Trails of DNA on old bandages asking someone to look at my scars to prove my time here My time is measured with broken wind dial microphones Screaming for AED support bands Artificial shock therapy reminding me there is still time That this life is not leaking moments of divided glory This moment right now... Will never happen again
0
Feb 3, 2015
Feb 3, 2015 at 12:25 PM UTC
Tundra west
La lunática lobezna recorre la tundra oscura, siguiendo el olor de su luna en la nieve, cada vez más cerca, cada vez más loba, cada vez más luna.
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Feb 1, 2015
Feb 1, 2015 at 2:07 AM UTC
La lunática lobezna
I saw a tree today In the arctic tundra For the first time in four months. It reminded me no matter what happens around you You can always grow.
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Nov 25, 2014
Nov 25, 2014 at 2:47 PM UTC
Alaska trees
In seductions of ****** wisps of alarm, tongues fly catching fire, their croaks are red-headed matchsticks. Intrepid hourly, the blanketed white harassed the appointed locum, the cashmere buds of tobacco. The open mouths adhere to the King of Limbs, the experimental corsages that — bloom — into existence. There is a space between all the noise where my fetal poise can reside, *forever holding, holding on,* forever holding, holding on.
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Apr 22, 2014
Apr 22, 2014 at 5:39 AM UTC
Frogpond Tundra.