Monday, September 12, 2005

hai-who?

of poisons, the best
enter through the patient's lungs
or the victim's ears

Sunday, September 11, 2005

winter window

Something in her tells her this isn't right. Something bone-deep that's been screaming for longer than she can remember. Something with claws that tries to rip its way out of her skin.

She's curled up on her desk, leaning against a window. Cold glass presses against her forehead and shoulder as she watches the world lurch by through the branches of a barren tree. She watches broken people leave houses with peeling paint, cross dead brown lawns, and fold themselves up into rusty cars. She wonders how she got here, then wonders if they wonder too.

When she closes her eyes, the people are smiling. The houses are neat, the lawns are fresh and the cars run smooth and quiet. She calls this place "Should've Been" and tries hard not to see it. After she sees it, when she opens her eyes, the screaming thing inside screams that much louder.

"People aren't supposed to live like this."

He looks up from his magazine and she realizes she's spoken aloud.

"Like what?"

"Like this." Without uncrossing her arms, she gestures towards the window - towards the broken people, towards herself. She wants him to recognize the problem, to wrap her in his arms and make a little of the Shouldn't Be go away.

He shrugs. "That's life," he says, turning a page and returning his attention to the latest news in punk rock. He listens to music that tells him everything is empty, in order to fill himself up. The screaming thing inside her wants to tear at him. The spell is being tightened, slow stitching crafting careful scars.

a few questions

Who told you the truth would be pretty? Who told you that you would like it? Who told you that it would be "fair"?

Who told you that it should be packaged and presented in a fashion more appealing to fringe groups and swing voters? Or that you could choose which version applied to your community?

Who told you that it would be offered in installment plans that you could buy into, a little bit at a time? Or that you could return it if you got it home and discovered it didn't fit your preconceptions?

Who told you that it should be seasoned to your educated palate? Or that you could send it back if it was too hot or too cold?