Addicted
I crave freedom
I feel the urge to fly.
I want to forget
And just let the days go by.
A tiny little pill
Makes me this happy.
I feel my head in the clouds
I'm sure I'm flying now.
I wake up
With no recollection of time.
My head is pounding
And the day is passing by.
I take two pills this time
The bottle calls out to me.
The bliss lasts longer
I feel completely free.
This addiction is beautiful
It gives me all I want.
Just a tiny little pill
And everything else is gone.
Marionette
Food
Razors
Enemies
Seducing me
With false promises
We’re all you’ve got, they say
What would you do without us?
Conspiring with my depression
Keeping me bloodied and malnourished
Laughing at me when I tell them to leave
We’re not going anywhere, they proclaim
Manipulating my puppet strings
Eliminating my free will
Setting me up for failure
Unhealthy coping skills
They are not my friends
I’m tired of this
So guess what?
I am
Done
Land of Opportunity
Purity is disgusting-
the planter of defiled creatures
in lands so dirty
that no one will step in the mud
to nurture the children they've created.
A living hellhole for the forgotten
to wallow in concepts
leading to conclusions
about being poison.
Immersed in the feces
of their species,
the purest beings cry
tears of semen
to the sounds of ghosts in the night.
The moon is soft
and the sun does thunder,
rolling and crashing
back to darkness
where it shines.
Each year the tally
clicks a thousand more,
as the hidden shadows
pretend not to keep score.
The Pedestal Child
Do you see me?
Do you hear me?
Do you know me?
I’m not your porcelain doll
Your Sunday school princess
Or your homecoming queen
I am nothing like I seem
I’m the pedestal child
Seated high a top her glass stool
Desperate and longing to leap off
I’m the child with the cheerful smile
Painted with crimson sin
I’m the little girl with the big bright eyes
Lined in Black
I’m the baby with the soft voice
And the punk rock soul
I’m not your porcelain doll
Your Sunday school princess
Or your homecoming queen
I am nothing like I seem
Do you see me?
Goldilocks in fishnet stockings
Do you hear me?
The quiet child with the sharp tongue and sarcastic wit
I’m your virginal porn star
Soft pink lace and vibrators
I’m your obedient rebel
Park college graduate part anti-authority bitch
I’m your delicate flower
Bent over backwards and fucked on a Saturday night
I’m not your porcelain doll
Your Sunday school princess
Or your homecoming queen
I am nothing like I seem
More
I am More
I am More than the numbers
The numbers on the scale
The numbers on my jeans
More than the 9 digits the government uses to keep track of me
I am More
More than the number of men who have filled me
More than the number of degrees collecting dust in the attic
More than the numbers in my bank account or on my paycheck
More than the 5 digit zip code that informs the suits if I am rich or poor
I am More
More than the numbers our world uses to
Define us
Measure us
Categorize us
Divide us
I am More
More than the numbers that our society has determined can decide
If we are worthy
Worthy of Love
Worthy of Friendship
Worthy of a Job or a Home
Worthy of our own Existence
I am More
And I will not let the obsession with the numbers
Dictate how I feel about myself because
I am More than the numbers
Numbers can not measure or determine
My beauty
My value
My worth
My existence
I have a right to be MORE
Summoning Grandma
A loss so great could not be mourned with tears.
The true lament is lunacy, engineered throughout the years.
At the tender age of ten, I could not process your transition.
But the thought of never seeing you put me well out of commission.
Now in my adulthood I still don't know if I can manage.
With your passing you took my sanity as collateral damage.
Maybe one day you will show up in a dream,
In all your glory, with a halo shining like a laser beam.
I often feel your presence and sophisticated grace.
You seem to whisper in my ear, "It's staring you right in the face."
What I would do for your rare wisdom and foresight.
I sure would sleep much better through the night.
Indiana Snow
My eyes begin to droop. My brain begins to snoop, about my day, if I'm feeling okay, and other such bits and pieces. It mixes it all, with a splash of emotion and sound, swirling colors all around. Next I know, I'm standing in a city, a city in stood in once long ago. Like long ago, the city is covered in snow. It's cold but I don't care. I want to play out there. My mummy bundles me, until I feel I can barely get free. She allows me out, reminds me of my limit, and pushes my lip back in when I pout. I mind her well, because that woman can yell. She feeds me warm bread and hot soup that doesn't come from a can, I think it's grand. Soon after I'm again out in the snow, she shakes her head, but let's me go. I remember that winter well, that winter in the Indiana snow.