new post every tuesday
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Good Grief
There’s a sanctity that follows
The saddest news you could ever hear
That every action that follows
Should be ceremonial
And sacred
And intentional
And honest
And beautiful
That every interaction
Should be meaningful
And enhancing
And evocative
And profound
And dutiful.
Even so
The great world spins.
Can you picture the glamour
Of the heaviest sigh
From a beautiful young widow
Laying In a dark velvet robe
That’s the grief whose hands
I’d like to grasp
A plea before falling
Pulling me back from the edge
I know I was meant to hold sadness
For others and myself
I find comfort in its familiar grip
The same comfort I felt when
I knew I needed to go back on my meds
When I looked out the window
And wanted to steep myself in the inky slurry
Let it hold me and slip in all around me.
That’s the grief whose hands
I’d like to hold
Like a trusted adult who will look both ways before
Crossing for the both of us
That is the grief whose hands
I’d like to shake
An accord agreed to
Between equals in confidence, in secretThat’s not the grief whose hands
I get to clasp
Instead it’s a beckoning finger curl
Pulling me away from the glamorous day
That’s not the grief whose hands
I get to choose
And the great world spins
And the great world spins.
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Laps
I try to find myself in every moment of solitudeIn an obsession to reaffirm my parts I’m proud of
In an obsession to change the parts I’m not
In an obsession to quantify every angle of my mind
In an obsession to qualify every hill on which I’ve died
My meditation happens best between the rumble strips in a 2009 Honda Pilot going 120 on the highway going back and forth between two homes 8 hours apart.
Or in my local aquatic center between the hard plastic ropes in a clingy one piece and goggles going back and forth in chlorinated laps 50m apart.
In both, my measured pacing lets me define myself to myself.
A selfish act in two parts, deciding who I want to be tomorrow, the day after and the next.With no plan of execution.
I am the executioner to my own demise.
The visionary to my own success.I try to find myself in every moment of solitude
Only to end up back at the start. -

Eat the end of a shotgun
He yelled through anonymous numbers
Into a patient voicemail inbox
Letting it echo, ruminate and marinate
In the space between sender and receiver
But he doesn’t know.
How you’ll eat the end of that shotgun
How you’ll chew on the metal tip
Let the sharp edges crunch under your molars
Chipping your teeth on its rounded edges
Feel the metallic taste in your spit
As you swirl its pieces with your tongue.
The moon made you crave the feral ferric
That his weak heart could never handle.
He doesn’t know your jaw is stronger
Than any weapon he’s ever carried.
Eat the end of a shotgun
And spit bullets from your pursed lips.
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Headed West
If you ever stop and look up
And see that beautiful mountain
The one that brought you here
and realize how beautiful it is.
How you’ve laid cradle in its valley
While it gave you new birth
To the parts of you
that blossom each spring.
If you ever stop and look up
In the sunniest of days
And feel peach flush
Back into your cheeks and spine.
How you’ve sought solace
In the joy of returning solstice,
Warm breeze carrying
All the creation I’ve risked to have.
If you feel all of that
On a warm spring day,
It’s time to get out of there.
Go somewhere where you hold it everyday.
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06-25-2022
I’m watching petals fall one by one at an accelerating pace.
The metaphor a little too literal as Roe v Wade becomes Red v Any person holding a uterus in their pelvis
I’m receding and regressing to a place where I felt safe. I don’t feel safe.
The wet eyes of every woman who can see themselves in every woman are staring back.
Another petal falls.
I cleaned them all up an hour ago. The handfuls of red.
But they keep falling.
I can’t reach for them fast enough.
I want to shake the stem to see how many will fall
But we already know who will fall
It won’t be the elitist white wives of Supreme Court justices.
I looked down for a minute and back up.
There are more petals in piles now.
I didn’t hear or see them fall
But they did
Tomorrow when I wake up
They might even all be gone
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Bad news
I assume you heard the news over the phone
The pause the caller had before.
Extending the time of not knowing for just a little longer
Making the space before the devastation hits
Just a little bigger
Hoping that they can offer you that one second more of peace
Before you can lose a piece of you for ever
The pulse before the contraction of yourself
That you can never expand back into again
That space filled with memories of giggling and harmonized drives
That space filled with nights spent chasing the moon, call me maybe
It’s a little smaller now.
Painting lines in a snow storm
And looking at bad views
Is a little smaller now
Making music
Singing music
Dancing to music
It’s a little smaller
All because of the voice that whispers after the pause.