{wanderlust}
{wandering from}
..place..to..place..
b a r e f e e t
-against-the-sidewalk-
^^^nothing more^^^
\than\a\
*dandelion*seed*
b l o w n a l o n g
~~~on~the~wind~~~
[with no control]
|over where|
/i/ /w/i/l/l/ /f/a/l/l/
(where i will)
"'"'"'"'plant my roots"'"'"'"'
a.n.d g.r.o.w
r e a c h i n g
*for the sky*
=to scrape against=
[the clouds]
(with lemon petals)
^but^never^truly^
///\\\getting there///\\\
{nothing more}
|than a weed|
:::to be plucked:::
/\/\/\out of the ground/\/\/\
~~and~discarded~~
|on the edge|
"'"'"'"'"'of the sidewalk"'"'"'"'"'
===that=same=sidewalk===
{that i had paced}
d a y s
m o n t h s
y e a r s
^earlier^
**hoping that**
~~~the~wind~~~
/\would take me/\
---where i needed---
...to go...
(but it didn't)
can i be homesick for a place i've never known?
Le Mal Du Pays
HOMESICK
O, how I long to lay by your side
Listening to your beating heart
Home is where you are my dear
I’m homesick for you—
To have you wrapped in my arms
Or just listening to you play a song
Home is where you are my dear
I’m homesick for you—
#HOMESICK
Wednesday, April 22, 2020
Kane Brown- Homesick:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=aiEcXEnfM3c
Running Away.
October 3rd
Running away.
It's pretty much all I'm capable of.
I run away from my mistakes.
I run away from my losses.
I run away from my problems.
And I run away from the monsters reminding me of
my mistakes
my losses
my problems.
But no matter how far I run,
I cannot hide.
I cannot escape.
They always find me in the end,
haunting me in my nightmares,
preventing me from moving on.
I would wake up in a cold sweat, shivering in fear.
You would wrap an arm around me,
pull me close into your chest as I sobbed,
promising me that the nightmares will run away and never hurt me again,
not with you by my side.
But if only you would understand,
that the nightmares won't run away,
that the nightmares will continue to hurt me.
Because to me,
the greatest nightmare is life itself.
And in order to wake up from this nightmare,
I have to die.
I've always felt homesick,
like I didn't belong in this world of life,
so I'm running away from it,
running away to a new place which I can hopefully call home.
Running away.
It's pretty much all I'm capable of.
So that's what I'll do.
homesick
The smell of rain
takes me back to
the palm trees in my backyard
my mom would never
stop taking care of
and the birds in my window
that would wake me up
every morning
the sound of rain
brings me back home
to a warm bed
a warm hug
and a home
that’s never empty
and never lonely
homesick - {renata ferretti}
Western Mass
Western Massachusetts inspires in me deep feelings. Feelings of being surrounded by intellectuals, of people who want the best for other people. There are trees so ripe with green color that their unfiltered light puts a halo over you. The sun shines so brightly as to ease every pain you have; the seasons are turbulent but a part of being, ultimately, alive.
My father's light yellow house is a haven of peace for me. I can sit on his couch for hours, listening to the sounds of a few Prius' driving by his window on his quiet street; the garden outside casts dusty shadows in shining light. The smell there is even a pleasant odor of flowers, and stepping outside of his house is to be greeted by something more natural than anything else.
Something bigger than yourself is at play here, and while the winters are a brutal downfall of foot after foot of snow, you come to love the snowflakes. The air is crisp and untainted. You come to appreciate the snowfall when you are inside a cozy home with everything cancelled; it is the freedom of being a New Englander, even if it's February and you want nothing more than that summertime magic.
But of course the summertime comes eventually, and it's suddenly August - and the downtown a bustling epicenter of hippies and almost-students, and you find yourself wondering when you can settle down here. For while there's not much going on but the incredible nature, the quiet life inspires a feeling of comfort that cannot be replaced by anything else.
Western Massachusetts is a haven I can come back to. And to be homesick? Always.
But I know it's waiting for me and its stark beauty follows me, wherever I go.
A Step Out the Door
Euphoric, it may seem,
Of the prospect of leaving to
become someone else to a growing mind.
Wishing that we could have sooner.
With the energy I have built up,
after all those years of yearning,
I have finally have the chance to do it
without the silly repercussions that follow
without the barriers that bar me to doing so.
Yet, as I finished packing
and the bags are at the door
and the sight of the summer air lingers,
I hesitated. I stopped.
Why? After all those years of longing
to move out and escape,
why must I hesitate.
And there, I looked behind
A woman and man, faces stern with passion
Yet I saw the tears, masked and uncontrollable
I knew that I was going to miss home. A lot.
Street Wise
Forlornly looking at my dog,
Who's curled on my tattered pants,
I look up and wish again for help,
A miracle, a sign that I should keep on
Instead of taking her to a pound
And walking with lead shoes into the Erie.
All I have is her and this faded picture
Of happier times, when I had Nathan.
My first true love, my baby, my all,
Pain rips into my ribs when I look
But I hate myself too much to not.
Him sitting on my lap seconds before
The door opened and Cherry ran in
And his little face lit up like a star.
Cherry is all I have left of then,
Of Nathan, my marriage, my mom
Before we overslept, missed the ark,
And drowned in the dirty streets.
Cancer came first, snatching my mom,
Dragging her on a ride of hope and fear,
Dropping her when she was comfortable.
I still had Nathan, who dried my tears,
Held my hand, and helped me through.
That smile, those sparkling eyes, his laugh
Bounced along the hollowing walls
Long after the plane crashed with him inside.
My husband left but it didn't matter,
Not anymore now that it was all empty, all gone.
My fire ate up everything else that was left
After a long night of Schnopps and gin.
It wasn't a home anymore, just a roof and walls,
Echoes of memories and reverberator of sobs.
I'm better off without it, but not Cherry,
Wrapped in a tight ball on my lap, shivering.
Despite all the clothes and blankets I give,
Nothing is warm like our home, our bed,
Nathan's embrace, my mother's smile,
My wedding ring that burned hot in the flames
But never truly broke down, just like the love,
Just like the house that is cindered wood
Being remodeled into someone else's dream.
I'm the only one that broke apart and lost it,
Lost my house, lost my family, lost everything.
I'll find my Cherry a home before I go.
MOTH
...
This is our foreword: home is sick. With these fictions, paint over what has been done. We found all these things in grandpa’s old suitcase—he died a slow and cruel man. He never let us take that train to the city. But now we’re free to roam, and we already bought our tickets home.
Grandpa died a sly and nonsensical man, but he was all we knew. He fed us, dressed us, housed us—even when he or we didn’t want it. “Nevertheless…” “Nevertheless…” That was his phrase. But now we’re free to stage our case, and in his legacy relay and forgive what he last said:
Hear me—
MOTH A
Buried in light, I was losing my breath. I had with me a frozen bottle of water. Two pillboxes, a bag, a phone, and nothing more. Sitting on the other end of this bench, I felt, on my face, the wind, the cold, and nothing more.
My head was weighing heavier, so I had to set my bag aside and lean on the backrest. My neck bent over backwards—I felt a breeze scrape against my throat. My eyes looked straight up, and I saw an empty winter sky. No stars, no moon—a dark pond of squirming blues fenced in by the spikes of a grey concrete jungle—my city, my Seoul.
The streets around me beamed a dizzy red and yellow. I had to clench my eyes tight to keep those lights outside. Oh, and a single raindrop tapped the middle of my forehead. I cannot remember any of these facts as being otherwise. Surrounded by these truths, I was thinking about why I’d run away.
I cared too much and cared too little; that’s why. I bore this pain and lowered these shutters.
But left in the gutters, I felt only frailer. For your rules and your fools, I stripped myself in layers.
Now I’m left bare, gasping for air. Prayers unanswered, favors unthanked.
Mutter this and mutter that—so on and so forth…
Enter a man, or a boy. He seemed somewhat my age, but taller. His hair was dark and long; his arms swung through the air like the sticks on those old metronomes. He was drunk, so I rolled my eyes back upwards and waited until he passed by.
He didn’t pass by. He sat on this end of the bench and leaned on the backrest the same way I did. You’re ruining my monologue, I thought.
Somehow, he heard it. His face creaked towards my general direction, and he whispered,
“You must be thinking I ruined your moment.”
Yes, but I wasn’t going to admit it.
“Are you drunk?” I replied instead.
“Do I look drunk?”
“Yeah. And you smell drunk as well.”
“Well so do you.”
“But I’m not—”
“Drunk?”
“No.”
“Is that what you believe?”
“What I believe in?”
“Belief in general.”
“I don’t believe I’m drunk.”
“Then I don’t have to explain.”
I was about to reply with something that makes more sense, but I stopped. I knew this pattern. I knew this scheme. I was being swept into his pace, this strange creature. If I were to talk to him any longer, next thing I know, I’d be having a whole conversation with him. Even worse, one that’s under his terms and his terms only. He spoke a recognizable language. I didn’t want to speak it anymore. That’s why I ran away.
So I ran away. I picked up my bag and broke into a sprint. I was scared. The delayed realization that I was talking to this complete stranger, alone, pushed me into a painful pang of panic. Then I felt my legs give up. My high sprint deformed into a low crawl.
The lights blurred into soggy yellow stains, then rushed into my lungs. I had to keep myself sane, so I carved my senses out with the jarring breeze. Wheeze after wheeze, I sunk into the cement below. Leap after leap, I breached my city alone.
I slid into a nearby playground, needing to catch my breath. I crawled up its biggest slide and sat down on its highest platform. The lights were dimmer here; in their place, I heard the noises of children: their laughter, their cries, their feet crunching the gravel below…
The chill of iron pierced my skull as I set it down on the platform, and my back stiffened as I curled into a cocoon. I kept my eyes open as they circled my knees. As they shrunk into twigs, I whispered to them a rasp apology. There was no one else but us.
Nothing more than a slab of steaming meat—I found myself pleading to breathe. As my vision thinned into a tame grey, I found myself lost in a field of snow.
I looked around, then saw behind me an endless line of “me”s. In single-file fashion, they shivered in each their own frequencies, and all their pitch-black eyes and dark brown beaks pointed towards one, precise location: me.
So, I decided to wander around for a bit. They followed me around like a tail.
White, then grey, then another shade of white. The monotonous plane robbed me of any sense of direction. Above it hovered a black fog. Wading through it, I took in deeper and deeper breaths.
I assumed a whole day had passed by the time I saw a faint, red bulge in the distance. Immediately, a swarm of lukewarm blood rushed into my veins, kicking my walk into a light gallop.
A burning igloo, about the size of a two-story building, emerged from the horizon in front of me. Waves of heat whooshed through my body as I approached. I raised my arms sideways as if to embrace it.
My fingertips grew numb as the fire grew louder. My wings began to singe, and my feelers flared ember-orange. The igloo’s roaring breath encroached me as I nudged myself into its flames. Hotter, then hotter, I sunk into its grace. I closed my eyes again. I felt my mind disintegrate.
But a sudden whirlwind swept me backwards, and the world became a darker grey. I opened my eyes to see a familiar monotone. Black fog rushed back into my eyes and lungs.
MOTH B
Enter a man, or a boy. His feet were lodged above my head, and his eyes were looking down on me. I couldn’t see through the shadow cast on his face. I couldn’t tell if he was smiling, or frowning.
“What are you doing, lying on the ground?” He asked.
I didn’t answer him. Instead, I gasped in pain, feeling a sharp migraine. I felt the gravel of the playground press into my spine, but I couldn’t get up. I thought about getting up, about moving my limbs this way and that way, but they didn’t budge.
This all felt like a dream, the one you don’t want to write down in your diary, the one you hold your breath in just to see if that’ll wake you up. But I didn’t wake up. In fact, I didn’t feel myself breathe at all. All I could do was to stare back at the silhouette in front of me with all my newborn contempt—and refuse to talk back.
“I know you’re not drunk. You’re not that type.”
I felt my left eye twitch.
“Get up.”
…
“Get up. It’s already too late.”
I wedged my head deeper into the ground.
He let out a quiet sigh, and, surveying his surroundings, landed his eyes on the platform I (I think) used to be lying on. He walked over there, crawled halfway up the slide, and reached for my bag. As he carried it back to me, he opened it and looked inside—again, looming over me.
“How many did you take?”
…
He took out and held both of my pillboxes in one hand, then shook them.
“I don’t even know anymore.” He murmured.
Then, he sat down next to me, crunching the gravel and letting out a low groan. I took my eyes off him and turned them towards the sky. For a while, we stayed that way: me looking upward, him forward. The sky was still dark; the playground, empty.
We began to hear birds chirp around us. I know he heard them too, because he mentioned them somewhere in the middle of his speech.
“The sun’s coming up.”
…
“It always does, doesn’t it?”
…
“It doesn’t care. It doesn’t care what happens down here, ya know? It always does what it always does. Up and down. Down and under.”
I decided not to dwell on whatever he says anymore.
“They’re not coping so well. They never did.”
…
“I know you’re not believing any of the things I’m saying, I know. I’ve been there, and I know. Believe me, you don’t have to explain anything. I know.”
…
“Come back.”
No.
He told me that he was getting frustrated. After what seems like the end of his patience, he broke. He stood straight up and began yelling—I didn’t listen to a single thing he yelled. I didn’t like it, and I didn’t have to. I already knew the words to that song. I heard it too many times. That’s what made me run away.
So I ran away. As soon as his arms rushed in to get a hold of me, I broke into another sprint. As soon as I did, I heard his voice drop silent. Now the noise of my footsteps alone breached the city’s silence. I ran towards the streets, through their yellow lights and through the glares of a newborn sun.
By the time I could catch my breath again, I found myself caught in the middle of a moving crowd. My legs were too exhausted to fight against it, and my mind was too faint to find a way through it, so I followed their steps and mimicked their walk. Their feet were light and quiet, as if they were sneaking past a sleeping child. Everyone had something in their hands: books, bags, bottles, the hands of others.
After a while, I saw the people in front of me go through a set of glass doors. I soon made sense of what that establishment was, and I pulled myself out of the crowd. From outside, I saw the procession continue. The line seemed to extend backwards indefinitely, only for its front to be absorbed through these doors into this single point in space.
A two-story building. I knew this one. I made my way around to its other side and leaned against its concrete wall.
Enter a man, or a boy. He seemed somewhat my age, but taller. He tiptoed towards me and leaned forward.
“Brother,” He said.
“Pastor,” I replied.
“Ended up here again.”
“It’s a place where people do that.”
“Nice weather, isn’t it?”
“It’s getting a bit cloudy.”
“It’s nice weather. I like it better that way.”
“Well I don’t.”
He took out a red pack of cigarettes from his back pocket gave its head a few light pats.
“Not that type, right?”
He picked out and lit up a cigarette.
“I don’t think so.”
As he sucked on the white stick, his eyes drooped towards the ground. I watched its grey fumes dissipated into a greyer sky as I waited for him to finish it.
“How’s he treating you now?”
“Pastor,”
“Brother,”
“I’m being chased by a man, or a boy. Someone bad and someone scary.”
He kept his eyes glued to the ground.
“I believe you.”
“Pastor, I really am—”
“Brother.”
…
“I believe you.”
…
“You don’t have to explain yourself.”
I kept my mouth shut as he lit up a second cigarette. I saw a couple drops of rain fall on the back of his head.
“Service’s starting soon.”
“I saw the people.”
“Wanna come back?”
“I don’t know, Pastor, I—”
“Brother.”
He breathed out a jagged bulk of smoke.
“Brother, neither do I.”
…
“But I believe.”
…
“Maybe I’ll buy you a meal too, next time.”
“What kind of meal?”
“The meat kind.” He said, as he gave me a light pat on the back and headed back inside.
I strolled around the building for a bit. The sky was again a uniform grey, and the high spikes of the city were buried in a thick fog. The noise of cars began to grow clearer and clearer, until they became another confused mess.
I decided to walk away—to put it kindly, but as soon as I saw the streets divide, I tripped and fell. I heard a voice, so I looked around. I saw the line. I heard the noise. Rain began to pour. I saw them walk through the deluge. I stood up and turned my back on them. I heard them laugh—the kind of laughter that made me run.
So I ran.
I ran towards the yellow in the grey.
Out of Season
Oh, sweet summer child!
How you dream of sunshine bright,
Of dappled leaves and warmth and light,
Of the end of endless night.
Oh, sweet summer child!
Sunless days dim your crown of gold,
The winter’s long, and oh so cold,
Your face still young, your heart grows old.
Oh, sweet summer child!
You long for skies of brilliant blue,
For lush green hills cloaked in morning dew.
You miss your home; it misses you.
Oh, sweet summer child!