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219 · Apr 2017
Eyes
Zach Lubline Apr 2017
He lay in that hospital bed like it was already his tomb.
Hardly breathing,
Hardly moving, save for the wisps of hair that some overhead fan
Would occasionally raise with more life than he had left.
His eyes stayed closed, as if deep in sleep
Until I, passing by, was draw to his bed.
Then, they opened.

And this man with scarcely the strength left to blink
Smiled,
More with his eyes than his mouth.
More with his soul than with his body.
He held my gaze within crystal blue eyes
That had become deep oceans
With all they had seen.

A single moment lasted an eternity as I swam in deep blue.
Searching for some sort of truth that I knew not whether I would find.
When I returned, I wasn't sure if I had gained something
Or left something behind.
Then the infinite eyes released a final breath
Then left, somehow, as if they had simply been taking a quick stop
Inside of the man.

And he returned to his bed, his tomb,
And I stayed one more moment before turning to walk again down the hall
On my way to more pressing things.
215 · Jul 2017
For Death
Zach Lubline Jul 2017
We grieve for death as if we won't all die one day,
As if death is a cruel visitor, unannounced and uninvited
As if someone stole something that we thought we were holding on to
Too tightly to be torn from our grasp.
We grieve for death like we have been slighted.
Like we have been tricked and deceived
Like we read the court transcript but life perjured itself.
Like we signed the contract
But there was fine print in invisible ink.
Like this wasn't supposed to happen.

They were supposed to be here.
They were supposed to be limitless,
I suppose, we supposed.

We grieve for death because we could not save them.
Because we could not fight back against the onslaught of time.
Because we could not change the span of decades into millennia,
Last seconds into slow hours.
Because we could not control
Even what we loved most.
Because we will die one day,
We grieve.

The infinite is impossible.
And we know that,
In our grief for death.
Until we forget,
For however long we have
Until we are reminded again,
Or until we serve only
To remind others in turn.
Zach Lubline Oct 2017
There was a man who did not always know his name.

Sometimes, it would be clear as the day and the time and the place,
Sometimes it would be like a forgotten memory
Leaving traces but just out of reach of his mind.

How reassuring it was in those moments
For someone to call him by a familiar sound,
And to know that at least one part of him was fuller than the moment before.

But when he was alone
Or around those who knew him best and did not feel the need to remind themselves of what he was called,
There was a terrifying absence within him, which he was too prideful to admit.
In those moments, the place, the time, the day were as much strangers to him as another universe.

Grasping at them was futile, and only served to remind him of how far he was from the person who had a name.
He would choose to ignore the truth that someone who was him existed, preferring to absorb a meaningless present than to grieve for a lost past.

Those suffering moments between names were a chill which sunk deep into his bones, and slowed his heart, so that even the space between beats, between moments, seemed unspeakably vast, each a lifetime, yet never endowing the wisdom that years give.

Then, all at once, the lifetimes would melt away in one warm burst
As something or someone reminded him of himself.
And for the most terrible moment, he would know all,
Both what is was like to be full,
And what it was like to be emptier than the most infinite void,
Realization and loss would envelop him
And he would understand what it was to not be.
This was the most hideous moment of his existence,
So much the worse for the knowing
Of what had been the lifetime before.

But this too would pass, blown away by the new, old name, and soon, it too would be forgotten.
Then, he was just him, unaware and unthreatened by the memory of nothing.

And that was happiness,
That was beauty,
That was truth.

For the man who did not always know his name,
To know it,
Was absolutely everything.
212 · Aug 2016
Both the Wave
Zach Lubline Aug 2016
She's so broken
Even she'll tell you that
And I'm not trying to fix her
I'm just trying to be with her

Because when she's not around,
I miss her
Like the sand misses the wave
It's only there at high tide
And until that moment, that one moment,
All the sand can do is wait
Frustrated,
Can't it come sooner?
But then it's there
And for a second, all is fair
All is right
All is complete.

Then, the retreat
The sand grasps at the water
Receding into some unknown oblivion
Maybe to come again,
Maybe not

Shes so **** damaged
But I keep thinking I'm the one not worth it
Because I can't shut up and take it
But it just gets so lonely on the beach

Why can't I be there?
Why can't I suffer?
Why can't she be the sand
And I be the wave?

Why do I even care?
Why do they all?
Every one of them, they aren't wrong.
They she her, and they fall.
They fall and fall.
Maybe she is their destruction.
Maybe she'll be mine.

But if she can slow down,
For a just one second,
I'll catch up.
I'll ride the tide with her
Neither the sand,
Both the wave.
210 · Mar 2017
Same
Zach Lubline Mar 2017
She has the same name as you.
And that same wild attitude too.
And that same weird way of sitting quiet
While simultaneously commanding the room.

I don't know her,
And she knows me far less,
But I feel like by the end of you and me,
We were little more than strangers at best.

If I touched her,
Would she feel like you?
Would her hair smell the way
That yours used to?
Would her kiss be familiar,
Or would it feel brand new?
201 · Jul 2017
Just a Drawing
Zach Lubline Jul 2017
It's just a drawing
She says
It doesn't have to be perfect.
But of course it does.
Because it's of her.

She's not perfect.
Not even close.
Her hair doesn't quite lie flat
Cause some sticks out straight
The way a fish may leap from the lake
While the rest swim methodically below.
Her smile may be too small,
Like its still waiting for the right moment to grow.
Her eyes aren't pristine blue or deep green
But a natural, solemn brown.
And that's okay, because I like it that way.

She's not the best dancer,
In fact she's more like to step on toes
Than point them.
She's not very funny, even when she tries,
And she does.
She doesn't run fast or sing well or play chess.
She wouldn't charm you right away,
The way some people do.
And that's okay, because I like it that way.

She's not perfect,
And shouldn't be.
Which is why this drawing has to be.
Because if I get her hair,
Or her eyes,
Or her dance,
Or her charm
Wrong,
She might seem perfect.
And I wouldn't like it that way.
184 · Jul 2017
Absense
Zach Lubline Jul 2017
Feeling the hole
The piece missing
All that is known is
Something not there
Absence strikes deep
Hurts all the more
The longer it lasts
One cannot accept
What is not there
Cannot lose
Without a finish line
Nothingness is ongoing
Emptiness is searching
Absence is infinite
174 · May 2019
Overboard
Zach Lubline May 2019
Crashing
Into fringed seas
Sinking down
No air to breathe
Darkness deepens
Sky no longer seen

Drowning
A crushing helplessness
Liquid turns to pain
Entering an unwilling chest
Screams unheard
Only water hears you confess

Dying
Blackness begins inside
The spark fading
As the last flame hides
Regret remains
As all else subsides
172 · May 2019
Haloes
Zach Lubline May 2019
There’s a twinkle in her eye
That’s rare to see
Rarer still, unless
She’s looking at me.

Looks forbidden
By lines drawn in the sand
By a pretend me
Trying to be a better man.

But my reflection
Is more beautiful in her blue
Haloed in a happiness
Illicit but true.
161 · May 2019
She Was
Zach Lubline May 2019
She was drops into small pools
When she moved.
Splashing up fountains of grace
Rippling through me in waves
Leaving a smell crisp
With fresh possibility.

She was cool leaves rustling
When she spoke.
Breaking the silence in every
Heart between lonely beats
With whispers which drowned
All other sound
And leaving me winded
But holding my breath.

She was crackling firewood
When she touched.
Bursting with warmth
Meant for a hearth far more
Welcoming than my wilderness
Fingers leaving embers behind
With each spark of contact
Leaving me shivering
For her to alight again.
148 · May 2020
Dance
Zach Lubline May 2020
Drum beats drown out feet on sand
Melodies punctuated by gusts of wind
The cold is only as biting
As headphone decrescendos
145 · May 2019
Raining
Zach Lubline May 2019
It’s raining when she steps outside
Freshwater mixes with salt under her eyes
Puddles under feet mix
With puddles in her mind
She breathes in droplets
Already drowning inside.
140 · Oct 2018
Warm
Zach Lubline Oct 2018
She said I was warm
Like some sort of compliment
Something I should be proud of
Because it could make someone like her
Less cold
And I smiled
Like I was proud
Like my heat was waiting
For someone like her
To need it
132 · Mar 2020
The Panic
Zach Lubline Mar 2020
It's hard to know what's real
When the stakes for false are so high
When we feel that one wrong move
May cost us precious time.

But what we cannot know
Should be the least of our fears
What we cannot do
Cannot be the cause of our tears.

We are stronger when we must wait
Than we ever are rushing ahead
And if the grass isn't green today,
We'll hope for tomorrow instead.
130 · May 2020
Still
Zach Lubline May 2020
Sometimes, there’s water so still and clear that you can see the reflection of everyone else in it.
And they’re happy and they’re sad
And they’re loved and they’re miserable.
And they don’t know you’re seeing them so they do all the little things that people do when they’re alone.
Like wrinkle the nose
And nibble their tongue
And look around
And close their eyes
And wish they were better.
Or different.
Or the same as they were.
They only do that when they’re alone or when they’re a reflection in still water.
And they think it’s only them.
But it not.
They can’t hear me
Shouting that it’s all of us,
Because the sound doesn’t travel far enough through the water to reach them.
So I just watch.
And wish I was better.
Or different.
Or the same as I was.
Until something stirs the water
And I’m gone.
128 · Feb 2020
Didn’t See Coming
Zach Lubline Feb 2020
I don’t know how to sooth the tears that I didn’t see coming.

When you know there’s a cancer growing
Like a microscopic wave
Rushing down vessel streets
Breaking down tissue windows and ***** doors,
Then you know that the man you’ve been building up will crumble.

When her memory is going
Like so many gusts of wind
Through a filing room
Full of names and faces
People and places
Blowing the carefully organized papers
Out tangled neurofiber doors
You know it’ll only be a matter of time till she blows away too.

But when a woman’s healthy heart
Gets heavy,
When young, smooth hands
Grow unsteady,
When the one who made it through
May have left something behind,
My pause is not just for effect.

Maybe we think that blessed people
Can’t also be scarred.
That normal CT scans
Can’t hide twisted insides.
So when the problem patients
Are the ones with solved problems,
Our empathy seems in short supply.

But the woman with no pain
May still not want to leave.
And there may be scarier things at home than an empty inhaler.
We’ve written off patients
With an insulin pen.
Sent home with a prescription
For return to life as usual.
We’re caught off guard
And instinctively build new walls
Because we aren’t prepared
For what we don’t think is there.
119 · May 2019
Touch
Zach Lubline May 2019
At her touch
Electric in fingertips once numb
Shivers up and down a rigid spine
Warmth like a stiff drink in my chest
Energy almost dizzying in my head
Power flowing though every muscle
Desire in breaths between lips
Life in eyes suddenly bright
116 · Aug 2018
Unfound
Zach Lubline Aug 2018
Things searched for but unfound
Are the things that carry the significance.
It is not the losing that wrecks us
But the moment when we stop looking
And accept that something is gone.
114 · Feb 2020
Storm Sheets
Zach Lubline Feb 2020
Waves of wrinkled fabric between me and her might as well be a vast ocean,
Storms of worn fluorescent light from a cracked bathroom door
Echo cracks or thunder that sounds like tears trying to be quiet in vain,
Across that depth, she’s the kind of calm that only comes in the deep center of the torrent, with the world coming apart around it,
I could sail to her, with a hand, with a word, and I might not be bashed against the cliff face,
But then I would have to face her, and acknowledge that no body can be that forcibly still without being torn apart by blunt force winds,
And the true cause might not simply be hot and cold winds from her,
But currents that run just deep enough between us to still be passable if someone, anyone, were strong enough to brave them.
108 · Feb 2020
Tourniquet
Zach Lubline Feb 2020
There are many things to make a tourniquet out of.
A plastic bag isn’t the best.
But when she’s crying on the phone
Saying you need to come
And the traffic lights seem to hold you back
And the elevator has never been so slow
And you say a silent prayer that that door is unlocked
So that when you finally get there
You don’t have to try to break it down.
And then she’s there, on the ground
And you don’t want to step in the blood.
It shouldn’t matter,
But you don’t want to step in it.

A plastic bag is close
And when you tie it around a spoon
You can get it tight around an arm.
You aren’t sure how tight it should be
You aren’t sure about anything.
There must have been a door
And an elevator
And stoplights
You’re trying to recall them
When you pull up to the wrong entrance,
The one that’s supposed to be for the ambulance
You don’t leave until they take her.
Then you can pull away to park
In some 2 hour zone,
For as long as it takes her.
The run back over sheets of ice
Feels like running into the abyss
You aren’t sure if you did the right thing
You aren’t sure how bad it is.

The plastic bag is in the trash.
She’s lying on a hospital bed,
Crisscrossed black lines
A new design on her arm,
Like a tattoo you have removed
In 5-7 days.
She says it’s your fault.
You did this.
You ruined this.
You didn’t save this.
Maybe she’s right.
You try not to step on her words
Because she needs to say them,
But you can’t really hear,
Because the idea of what could have happened
Is still ringing in your ears.
The sound of What If
So much louder than shouts.
So much crueler than blame.
But What If isn’t What Is.
And nothing else is important.
Nothing really matters,
Except for a hospital bed, three lines of sutures, and a plastic bag.

— The End —