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Fa Be O Jan 2013
El es….

no lo se, tal vez es el aroma de aquel café con vainilla ese día blanco; ese instante que dio vueltas en mi cabeza y el ni en cuenta….tal vez es el sabor a tequila y el latido de su corazón y el piso frió…tal vez es sabor a menta, o una canción punk…o tal vez es el dolor que me gusta mas, o el placer que duele tanto….tal vez es el amor de mi vida, o otra historia que contar….tal vez es su altura, la forma que se sienta, su cuerpo largo y yo tan pequeña…tal vez es sus ojos, sus pestañas, su nariz…tal vez es su dolor, y el mio, tal vez es su debilidad, y la mía…tal vez es una cerveza y un cigarrillo nervioso, o un buen whisky para relajar…. quizás sea simplemente ese ultimo beso, pasión, calor…..tal vez es el sueño que ya no me llega, las horas sin dormir…tal vez sea cada lagrima que callo, tal vez.

Tal vez, el es simplemente un anhelo mas.
5/28/12
Raul Feb 6
En su sol naranja vainilla
Su azul pacífico con sal
Piel de amanecer
Suya es la fé
Sin estigmas del amor
Usted sonría al pasado
Hacia la tierra de Dios
Con su ***** curva en lineas me describe
Cante su nombre
Nuestra en serenidad del recuerdo convive
Dentro, en el invierno del sur, el amor renace
Krusty Aranda Oct 2017
No es que no quiera;
es que no puedo.

La afinidad de tu voz con la mía,
la necedad de tus argumentos,
el sarcasmo en tus bromas,
la intensidad de tus emociones,
la calidez de tu mirada,
la elegancia de tu rostro,
la suavidad de tus labios,
media luna en tu sonrisa,
la vainilla de tu esencia,
el vaivén de tu cabello,
la constelación de tus ojos,
el universo de tu abrazo,
el edén de tus besos,
el pecado de tu ****,
la pureza de un "te amo"
...

Dime,
¿cómo puedo poner en palabras todo lo que eres?
No es que no quiera;
es que no puedo.
marsh Sep 2017
No eres solo lo que piensas,
Lo que ves, lo que representas.

Eres luz, pasión, una estrella fugaz que
si te descuidas
No podrás realmente apreciar

Eres el baile lento
café con vainilla que jamás se acaba
La sal de playa
El silencio de una respiración
La seguridad de voltear y encontrarte

Eres truenos, lluvia, gritos de silencio
Un terremoto, una inundación

Eres galaxia
Interminable, extraordinaria

Eres tú y solo tú.
La abuelita guardaba, con olor de vainilla
Su guitarra en estuche forrado en verde pana.
¡Hace ya tantos años!...   Era en la edad lejana
De contradanzas lentas, mantón y redecilla.

La abuelita tocaba, siempre alegre y sencilla;
Y con cuánto donaire, su cabecita cana
Iba el compás llevando, al tocar la pavana
Que bailaba en sus tiempos de noviazgo en Sevilla.

Y tocaba y cantaba la abuelita.   Su canto,
De lo que ha muerto y vive tenía el dulce encanto,
Y siempre el estribillo decía: «¿No te acuerdas?»

Y una tarde -la última- «¿No te acuerdas?» cantaba,
Bajó los ojos tristes, mas la vi que lloraba;
Y sus cabellos blancos cayeron en las cuerdas.
Johnny Noiπ Jun 2018
****/****·ing/ˈkiliNG/noun
noun: killing; plural noun:                                   killings
1. an act of causing death, especially
deliberately.
synonyms: ******, assassination,
                                           homicide,
manslaughter, elimination, putting                               to death,
execution; honor killing; slaughter,
massacre, butchery, carnage,                  bloodshed,
extermination, annihilation;
                                 literary: (          )                   slaying
"a brutal killing"
adjective: killing
1. causing death.                    "****-killing"
synonyms: deadly, lethal, fatal, mortal,
                        death-dealing; mur·der·ous
ˈmərd(ə)rəs/adjective:                                                murdero­us
capable of or                            intending to ******;                          
dangerously violent.
"a brutal and murderous despot"
synonyms: homicidal, brutal, violent,
             savage, ferocious, fierce, vicious,
    bloodthirsty, barbarous, barbaric; fatal, lethal,
deadly, mortal,                    death-dealing; archaic:                   sanguinary
                     "a murderous attack"
(of an action, event, or plan) involving            
****** or extreme violence.
"murderous acts of terrorism"
informal:                                             ­        extremely arduous or unpleasant.
"the team had a                                           murderous schedule
                   of four games                                         in ten days"
synonyms: arduous,                               grueling, strenuous,
punishing, onerous, exhausting,                     taxing,
difficult, rigorous; informal:                          killing, hellish
                                      "a murderous schedule"

informal
exhausting; unbearable.
"the suspense will be killing"
synonyms: exhausting,     grueling,
punishing, taxing, draining,   wearing,
prostrating,                                    crushing, tiring, fatiguing,
debilitating,                                     enervating, arduous, tough,
demanding, onerous, strenuous,
       rigorous; informal:(                     ) murderous
"a killing schedule"
dated:                                   overwhelmingly funny.
****            |                  1
kil/verb
gerund or present participle: killing
1. cause the death of (a person, animal,
or other living thing). "her father was killed
a car crash" synonyms: ******, take/end
the life of, assassinate,                      eliminate, terminate,
dispatch, finish off, put to death, execute;
slaughter,                  butcher, massacre, wipe out,
annihilate, exterminate, mow down, shoot down,
cut down,                        cut to pieces; informal:     bump off, polish off,
do away with, do in, knock off,
        take out,                                                        croak­, stiff, blow away,
liquidate, dispose of, ice, *****, rub out,
waste, whack, smoke; euphemistic: (          ) neutralize; literary:             slay
"gangs killed twenty-seven people"
get rid of or destroy completely,       especially in large numbers.
                                                        ­   "there is every possibility all river life
       would be killed off for generations"
(of a writer) bring                         about the “death” of a fictional character.
                       2. (                    ), (          ),  -  (                   )
put an end to or cause the failure or defeat of (something).
"the committee voted to **** the project"
synonyms: destroy, put an end to, end,
             extinguish, dash, quash, ruin, wreck,
shatter, smash, crush, scotch, thwart; informal:              
put the kibosh on, stymie, scuttle
"this would                **** all hopes of progress"
veto, defeat, vote down, rule against, reject,
                              throw out, overrule, overturn,
                                                               put a stop to, quash, squash
"an opposition                                       attempt to **** the bill"
stop (a computer program or process).
informal
switch off (a light or engine).
synonyms: turn off, switch off, stop, shut off/down, cut
"Noel killed the engine"
informal:        delete (a line, paragraph, or file)
                             from a document or computer.
informal
consume the entire contents of
                               (a bottle containing an alcoholic drink).
(in tennis and similar games) hit
      (the ball) so forcefully that it cannot be returned.
(in soccer or other ball games) make (the ball) stop.
neutralize or subdue (an effect or quality).
"the sauce would **** the taste of the herbs"
synonyms: alleviate, assuage, soothe, allay,
              dull, blunt, deaden, stifle, suppress, subdue
"a shot to **** the pain"
3. informal:            overwhelm (someone)
with an emotion.
"the suspense is killing me"
overexert oneself.
"I killed myself carrying those things home"
synonyms: exhaust, wear out, tire out,
overtax, overtire, fatigue, weary, sap, drain, enervate, knock out
"you must rest or you'll **** yourself"
used (      ) hyperbolically to indicate that someone
will be extremely angry with (another person).
                   "my parents will **** me if they catch me out here"
        cause pain or anguish to.
         "my feet are killing me"  synonyms:
           hurt, cause pain to, torture,
                    torment, cause discomfort to;
   be painful, be sore,
be uncomfortable
"my feet were killing me"
               4.      pass (time, or a specified amount of it),
typically while waiting for a particular event.
"when he reached the station, he found
              he actually had an hour to ****"
synonyms: while away, fill (up), occupy, pass, spend, waste
"we had to **** several hours at the airport"
Origin: Middle English (in the sense ‘strike, beat,’
also ‘put to death’): probably of Germanic
origin and related to quell. The noun originally
denoted a stroke or blow.va·gi·na/vəˈjīnə/noun:
******; plural noun:
      vaginas;                        plural noun: vaginae
the muscular tube leading
from the external (                    )                    
                          genitals to the ******
                    of the ****** in women &                    most
female mammals.
BOTANY: ZOOLOGY
any sheath-           like structure,               especially
a sheath                       formed around a stem by the base of a leaf.
Origin: late 17th century: from Latin, literally
‘sheath, scabbard,’ which is also the source
of the word                        vanilla.va·nil·la /vəˈnilə/noun: vanilla
1. a substance obtained from vanilla beans
or produced artificially and used to flavor
sweet foods or to impart a fragrant scent to
cosmetic preparations.                                      "vanilla ice cream"
ice cream flavored with vanilla.
plural noun: vanillas                                       "four scoops of vanilla
with hot fudge sauce" of the yellowish-white
color of vanilla ice cream. modifier noun:
vanilla "a vanilla dress" 2. a tropical
climbing                                                         orchid that has fragrant
flowers and long pod-like fruit                   (                     )
[wait...                                  pod-like              ­   fruit?
a pod is a fruit...         (                         )
no metaphor necessary (               );]
             the fruit of the vanilla plant,
which is cured and then either used
in cooking                                         or processed to extract
an essence that is used                    for flavor and fragrance                  .
noun: vanilla bean;                      plural noun: vanilla beans
adjective: informal
adjective: vanilla;               adjective:
plain vanilla 1.            having no special or extra
features; ordinary or standard.
"choosing plain vanilla technology
wherever you can will                save you money"
Origin: mid 17th century:
from Spanish vainilla ‘pod,’         [diminutive of
              vaina ‘sheath, pod,’ from Latin ****** ‘sheath.’]
The spelling change was due
to association with French vanille .                          .
u·ter·us/ˈyo͞odərəs/noun: ******; plural noun: uteri
the ***** in the lower body of a woman
or female mammal where offspring
are conceived and in which they gestate
                         before birth; the womb.                               Origin: Latin;
                         related
to Greek hustera .  Compare with hysteric.
hys·ter·ic/ həˈsterik/noun
plural noun: hysterics
1. informal:  a wildly                            emotional        and exaggerated
reaction. "the child
(                                       )      has been seized with regular
fits of hysterics at bedtime"
synonyms: hysteria, wildness,                     feverishness,
irrationality, frenzy, loss of control,                 delirium,
derangement, mania "a fit of hysterics"
uncontrollable laughter.
noun: hysteric
"this started them  both giggling
& they fled upstairs in hysterics"
synonyms: fits of laughter, gales of
laughter, peals of laughter, paroxysms of
laughter, uncontrollable laughter, convulsions,
fits; informal: stitches
"the girls collapsed in hysterics"
2. a person suffering from hysteria. adjective:
hysteric 1. another term for hysterical (sense 2).
Origin: mid 17th century (as an adjective):
via Latin from Greek husterikos ‘of the womb,’
from hustera ‘womb’ (hysteria being thought
to be specific to women and associated
with the womb), related to ******.
hys·ter·i·cal/həˈsterək(ə)l/adjective: hysterical
1. deriving from or affected by uncontrolled
extreme emotion.         "hysterical laughter"
synonyms: overwrought, overemotional,
out of control, frenzied, frantic, wild,
feverish, crazed; beside oneself,
driven to distraction, distraught,
agitated,
berserk, manic, delirious, unhinged,
deranged,
                  out of one's mind,            raving;
informal:        
                          in a state
"Janet became hysterical"
informal:                           extremely funny.
"her attempts                     to teach them
to dance were hysterical"
synonyms: hilarious, uproarious, very funny,
very amusing, comical, farcical; informal:    
        hysterically funny, priceless,
                                 side-splitting,
                                 rib-tickling, gut-busting,
                                 knee-slapping, thigh-slapping,
a scream, a hoot,       a barrel of laughs;(                      ) dated:      
          killing
         "her attempts to (                  ) dance were hysterical"
2. PSYCHIATRY
relating to, associated with, or suffering
from hysteria.                           "the doctor thinks the condition
is partly hysterical"                      another term for histrionic
(denoting personality disorder).
all found

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