Last night I dreamt of my father. Grass was growing already through his lifeless lips. My mother was all sticks and bones. The kind of thin you can feel in your hands when your fingertips touch her picture.
I am in a haze.
I have no mother or father and this is not something that comes suddenly. It sneaks its way through weeks so you feel surprised when it comes, but it has been there all along. Today I am merely a character in search of a plot.
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
sixtyeight
The cigarette burned to the filter, like a forgotten candle burns to the candlestick and then the house burns down to the foundation. He chuckled as he became acutely aware of the exposition; nicotine takes all the free will out of slow suicide.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
sixtyseven
"how do you feel?"
"i don't."
But, I guess the best way to explain it is that it's like gazing upon the monolith in 2001 (the movie, not the year). Everything seems to make sense somehow, but you don't understand it, and you don't like it.
And, of course, it's full of stars, just like everything is.
Thursday, June 10, 2010
#200
he sat facing her, the restaurant booths more comfortable than most, older than most too, judging from the threadbare base and long outdated color schemes. why was he thinking of these things at such a time? he chided himself.
hair falling over her blushing face, her eyes wandered around the diner. he watched her blink several times, knowing that she wasn't looking for the waitress, wasn't really looking at all. her lips moved slightly, a quiver, they way they do when you're about to speak but your mind acknowledges the imminent turn of events should you vocalize that thought, so you just take a deep breath instead.
"how long?" he broke the silence.
"2 weeks."
hair falling over her blushing face, her eyes wandered around the diner. he watched her blink several times, knowing that she wasn't looking for the waitress, wasn't really looking at all. her lips moved slightly, a quiver, they way they do when you're about to speak but your mind acknowledges the imminent turn of events should you vocalize that thought, so you just take a deep breath instead.
"how long?" he broke the silence.
"2 weeks."
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
sixtysix
I heard his voice, but understanding it was like remembering a dream after you've had others. That feeling you get when something becomes less important.
I don't know if Khalil Gibran is my shoulder angel, or if I am his.
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
#199
i took a photo of your eyes. i said it was for an art project. not to sound like a stalker or anything, but i didn't have an art assignment. i'm not even enrolled in that class.
on a separate note, do you ever feel as though your soul is being watched?
on a separate note, do you ever feel as though your soul is being watched?
#198
without asking, she rolled down the window. heavy city air whipped in, forcing her green eyes shut. for a moment, her visage consisted of only smudged blue eyeliner and a pair of thin red lips poking out under a tangled brown mane of hair. "oh i love this city" she sighed aloud. he'd driven these streets long enough to know that just because the words were in the air, it didn't mean they were directed to him.
each word came out quickly, she reached in her purse, then hands to hair, to window, back to her lap suddenly, as if every movement time-sensitive.
he thought of telling her to roll up the window, but something of the laughlines around her mouth made him stop. shifting her weight to face the window, her sleeve moved to reveal a small tattoo. it was a flag of a country in chaos. he wondered why this city deserved her love, why she gave it when she seemed so free and it felt so weighted. she made him think of guns and of his son, learning to use them against other men's sons. he thought of hope and despair and wondered which she held more of. maybe, for her, every moment felt temporary, every movement so near her last.
each word came out quickly, she reached in her purse, then hands to hair, to window, back to her lap suddenly, as if every movement time-sensitive.
he thought of telling her to roll up the window, but something of the laughlines around her mouth made him stop. shifting her weight to face the window, her sleeve moved to reveal a small tattoo. it was a flag of a country in chaos. he wondered why this city deserved her love, why she gave it when she seemed so free and it felt so weighted. she made him think of guns and of his son, learning to use them against other men's sons. he thought of hope and despair and wondered which she held more of. maybe, for her, every moment felt temporary, every movement so near her last.
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