Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
#wutang
The day I met you I was drunk The house was breathing with life and memories being made And I heard someone mumble something about someone being here And nearly panicked at the possibilities of whom it could've been But then you spoke The room died down for a few seconds, As if everyone there knew how important you were And how important you would be Then exploded into laughter And you vanished into the crowd leaving a canary yellow glass slipper behind as a calling card The first Wu-Tang song we listened to together was C.R.E.A.M I didn't know you were a fan until it came on And suddenly I remembered that slipper And as time went on, I'd slowly begin to understand the level of your royalty I'd see you fight back invisible armies in the name of love I'd see you take command and charge the world with fire in your eyes And eventually I realized that, around you I was invincible (Or felt like it at least) And now, here you lay Empress of Goons and Wu-Tang Goddess of the very moon and stars that speak through your eyes each time you smile Queen of the Hood Rats Princess, and keeper of the key to my heart And as I watch you laugh and enjoy yourself I'll clutch the glass slipper behind my back And wonder when the right time to present it to you is And I'll pray that one day You'll allow me to call you mine
0
Aug 19, 2020
Aug 19, 2020 at 9:49 AM UTC
The Wu-Tang Glass Slipper
the slums of shaolin gave rise to nine buddha monks to each...four chambers
0
Mar 8, 2019
Mar 8, 2019 at 7:51 PM UTC
The Wu
People of modern society are blind. They've lost sight of what it means to recognize and accept basic human emotions. They're frightened by feeling. At the first sign of angst, depression, anxiety, discomfort, or anger they're convinced it can't be natural. It must be some disease or disorder that is causing such pain. No other answer, diagnose and treat at once. Children, teenagers, young adults, the middle aged, and the elderly all desperately seeking some sort of instantaneous solution for themselves and their loved ones. Those that they should hold dear pawned off on medications from those commercials with smiling faces that they wish to be their own. While in the end the only smiling faces are those with full pockets. We as humans must confront the fact that sometimes there is not a light at the end of the tunnel and adapt, as our species so often has, to our individual and collective darkness. For without that darkness we would never recognize the light. Because once was a time when we sought to not mask our pain but to understand it. ( see: Neitzche, Kierkegaard, Sartre, Camus, etc.) When experience and education actually provided freedom and enlightenment, where the youth were given tools to understand themselves, their society, and their emotions, to find themselves, to learn, and were encouraged to ask the important questions, to question at all. To question it all. Who am I? What are we? When did we get here? Where did we come from? Why are we here? Open your eyes.
0
May 19, 2015
May 19, 2015 at 3:08 AM UTC
Word is bond
People of modern society are blind. They've lost sight of what it means to recognize and accept basic human emotions. They're frightened by feeling. At the first sign of angst, depression, anxiety, discomfort, or anger they're convinced it can't be natural. It must be some disease or disorder that is causing such pain. No other answer, diagnose and treat at once. Children, teenagers, young adults, the middle aged, and the elderly all desperately seeking some sort of instantaneous solution for themselves and their loved ones. Those that they should hold dear pawned off on medications from those commercials with smiling faces that they wish to be their own. While in the end the only smiling faces are those with full pockets. We as humans must confront the fact that sometimes there is not a light at the end of the tunnel and adapt, as our species so often has, to our individual and collective darkness. For without that darkness we would never recognize the light. Because once was a time when we sought to not mask our pain but to understand it. ( see: Neitzche, Kierkegaard, Sartre, Camus, etc.) When experience and education actually provided freedom and enlightenment, where the youth were given tools to understand themselves, their society, and their emotions, to find themselves, to learn, and were encouraged to ask the important questions, to question at all. To question it all. Who am I? What are we? When did we get here? Where did we come from? Why are we here? Open your eyes.
Continue reading...
28