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Your arms are like vines
Winding their way up my body
Blossoming flowers where I’d seen none before.
The touch of your fingertips
Tender like the brush of leaves
And your windy breath raising my flesh;
Pull me in. Pull me down.
I yearn for your roots
Intertwined with mine,
An infinite dance toward the skies
As we grow as one.
 Dec 2020 South City Lady
HOPE
To harmonize thyself
For sense of inclusion
Within thy brokenness
She tried

To take off this laprosy
Hanging around her
Producing rejection
She tried

To drown on thy vast
Of scented cologne of hers
To attract the attention of theirs
She tried

To overdose on pharmaceutical
At least they will besiege for life
Neither miracle to keep her alive
She tried

Of all that could come up to her mind
To end the misery deep within her spirit
She tried tried tried and tried million times
Yet she still felt like a loveless soul
 Dec 2020 South City Lady
ymmiJ
running from sunrise
drawing on clouded mirrors
last nights fading plan
Punished by the sun
in a desert of our love.

Slipshod the sailing stones,
how dispassion speckles the playa floor,
salt pans dissolve motivating force.

I'm a man returning to his ground.
You're a woman seeking refuge
in the cracked crevices of my rib cage.

So far below sea level,
where does love go from here to survive?

Perhaps, Chloride City
and the grave of a James McKay?

Maybe at Bottle House in Rhyolite,
the "Queen City"?

Either way, this sensation has become an unsacred mirage:

the watering hole, a leadfield,
with which we can only look back from.

Praying the sulfur in the sky
passes on from this place,

before we turn into something sodium, something akin to
Lot's careless wife.
 Dec 2020 South City Lady
Ayesha
I wonder what lonely sees
 women with pretty eyes
— a library in the night
a classroom with broken chairs

white-boards
         and bullet-holes
echoes in the halls,
giggles on the swings—
a group of laughing men

wine glasses with their clinks
an unread book—
     a wet matchstick box

I wonder what lonely sees—
when he wanders around the towns
  — whether
endless moors beneath    glass-lid skies
  empty roads,
and emptier cadavers —

or
— just the world

as it is—
“To the person in the bell jar, blank and stopped as a dead baby, the world itself is a bad dream.”

-Sylvia Plath
Your memory becomes
nebulous when
you think about your wrongdoings,
however, it becomes
crystal clear
when remembering mine.
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