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Violet Hooper  Mar 2016
mrm
Violet Hooper Mar 2016
mrm
some days it's not so bad
I can keep my brain on track
but I can't stand the distance
between us
and I'd be there tomorrow if
I could find a way
I'll pull the money from my piggy bank
if it meant I could stay

just as always there are two sides to this
the love that pulls me towards you
and leaving my friends
we're all growing up and I guess that's okay
but I didn't expect  
to love you this way
Wordfreak  Aug 2020
Torrent (MrM)
Wordfreak Aug 2020
What, then
Do you recommend
For reverberation
Of the soul?
When nature
In all her glory
Decides instead
To turn the heavens
Into an assault.
Pouring thunder,
Lightning
Down my throat
As I pour the dark
Sludge of resentment
From my ears
In return.
Wordfreak Jul 2020
It's impossible to
Build something
Worth the effort
If the pieces
Won't go back
Together
Wordfreak  Aug 2020
Purge (MrM)
Wordfreak Aug 2020
That means something
Very different
To both of us.
The rushing water
May work as your filter
But we both know
That to purge
I need pain
Blood
To force out the hurt.
Wordfreak  Jul 2020
Drown (MrM)
Wordfreak Jul 2020
For sure
Bronze has stronger draw
Than silver.
Though silver
Made me who I am.
It started at the tip of my tongue
Coaxed it's way down my throat
And coated my lungs
Sweeter than honey
Yet sharper than steel.
It recoiled, however
Returning to nothing
So I thought nothing more
Of the things that shine in this world.
Silver was what I chose
Because silver was pure.
Silver cannot be blamed
For the sin that passes the lips.
For whatever alloy
Coated my airways
The message
Would have been
The same.
The only alteration
In the delivery.
Our past is shameful,
Mine especially,
Yet they have no bearing
On our future.
As the choice in metal
Has no bearing
On the words spoken.
Wordfreak  Jul 2020
Sail (MrM)
Wordfreak Jul 2020
I'd like to return there
To tiptoe between the cracked hulls
Gilded with rust as if golden pillars.
Our faces reflected
In the puddles on the floor
Uncharacteristically happy
For though we were soaked
With despair
We were warmed
By an exchange of emotion.
It's true,
Passage of time dulled the shine
As honeyed words grew bitter
Yet inspiration always returns.
The boards can be fixed.
Remember, it is never too late
To chase dreams.
They are difficult to chase,
As fireflies on a moonlit night
Just follow the tangled line,
See where it leads.
I admit my eyes
Have also wandered the heavens
Pondering the outcomes
Of a million variants
Of choices made.
Just as it is never too late
To chase dreams,
It is never too late to set sail.
We may need to mend the sails
Perhaps patch the bilge,
By tomorrow we could
Be letting the water lead us
Where we are supposed to be.
Wordfreak Jul 2020
A fair point,
But you know me.
I've never been good
At drawing my own map.
There's too many
Straight lines.
Besides, my hands shake
Too much.
Wordfreak  Aug 2020
Wilt (MrM)
Wordfreak Aug 2020
It may be a finite resource,
But it's most precious.
Rich with iron,
The only ****** fluid with
Which you can smith
A sword.
You know I've always
Felt more at home
In the dark.
Treading water
Is sometimes
Too much.
And I'll return to
The dirt when
It's my time
To do so.
The only thing that
I know for sure
Is that pain doesn't
Feel real
Unless it comes from within.
Wordfreak Jul 2020
It doesn't hurt
When they leave
Only because
I know it's
Going to happen.
I'm used to
Self medicating.
If I hurt when they leave
My medicine cabinet
Is fully stocked anyway.
Wordfreak Jul 2020
No, not always.
Without oxygen
Or sufficient fuel
The flames will die.
Though I will be honest,
There are flames I thought
Had been extinguished,
That I now think
I make have been
Mistaken about.
I don't think gasoline would help.
It tends to explode,
And I'm already in so many peices.
Madison Murdoch  Jan 2016
I am
Madison Murdoch Jan 2016
I am four and as my pigtails bounce in the frigid fall air my dad teaches me how to fly a kite. I watch, mesmerized, at the sight of red, blue, yellow, and green dancing together in the air. My dad is a puppeteer of magic. I can admire the world from his shoulders. My dad is my hero.

I am six and my dad is gone. He talks to me and my mom on video calls in a beige T-Shirt, he smiles while my mom cries. On Christmas Day all I really want to open is the computer screen to pull him out. I’m not old enough to understand that all I’ll get is pixels, little pieces of a mirror image that can’t compare to the real thing. I am six and as I ride in the backseat of my mother’s red explorer we listen to the radio and when “two soldiers die in Baghdad.” I think it’s my dad. Everything turns black. My life is falling apart.

I am eight and my mom tells my dad to go fly a kite, I ask if I can come too. She says he’s not the same since he came back. I wish I could remember; I wish I could choose. All I know is that while my hero is here, my life is not, and next year my mother is leaving. My dad is the reason.

I am thirteen and I wish. I wish. I wish. I am so jealous of the people around me I am green. I wish to mirror the bodies of AD Campaigns.  I hate my ******* teeth. I wish for a prince charming, to sweep me off my feet. I don’t have a home. So I build one in hate and I try to escape. I wish my dad could communicate. I try to run away. I have an innate ability to disappreciate. I am dysfunctionally full of distaste for every flavor of who I am. And I don’t know it, but my dad is broken. Because his life has escaped him like a magic trick, my table cloth of a mother has been pulled out from under the dishes on the dining room table, and maybe the glasses are still there but every little spill stains. All I know is that he makes me clean my room, and we argue. My dad is a tyrant.

I am sixteen and I am torn. Every time I shut the door to the houses behind me I wish I didn’t have to. The guilt of escaping is suffocating and I am no longer filled with a jumpy buzz at the thought of leaving. Because I feel like I’ve already gone, and I’ve never had a place where I belong.  And the idea of being an adult sends shivers up my spine, brings darts to my eyes, and staggering breaths into my throat like a scratched CD. I’m not ready. My dad holds my head to his shoulder, laughing at me. And now that I’m older, I see. My dad is my home. My parents build the barebones of my skeletal body, and even though the responsibility of paying the water bill makes me anxious, I’m glad I get the paint the walls

-mrm 10/5/15

— The End —