pretty isn’t everything you punk ass
my body is not a fucking billboard for you to stare
at my hips were not made for your enjoyment the feeling
of your eyes drilling holes into the back of my
head do not make me feel beautiful your catcalls
are not a compliment no I am not starved for attention
let's get one thing straight: I wear dresses because I want to
fucking wear dresses not for you but for me
I'm not a bitch if I say no and I'm not a slut if I say yes
you are not the king stop putting yourself on a pedestal
I am not required to bow down to you and I never will
I know who I am I am confident enough to not care what you
think of me; my standard in beauty is not how many guys
want to fuck me it is not measured by how many boys
whisper about me to their friends you do not
have any influence on my self-worth I do not wear makeup
to prove to you that I am pretty do not assume anything
about me I am not your history textbook you know nothing
about me and if you did it wouldn't matter because all you
care about is how pretty I look and not who I actually
am and that makes all the difference
(h.l.)
Its never too late to mend
Its never too late to mend
As you can always try to change
Change for the better
As you will find yourself to be fitter
To tackle all situations and hurdles in life.
This was an advice,
by my teacher,
who wished me success in all my strive.
Its never too late to mend
But why mend when you can bend
The rules, regulations and trends
Said my good friend.
In today's times all things rhyme
If you know the right tunes
You can play along the dunes.
All you need are mighty strings
And deep pockets to make things swing.
Its never too late to mend
I think of this line often
But to practice this sometimes I soften,
with the need of time I let myself knead
Also plead,to gain desired lead.
But its never too late to mend
Is a simple advice to lend.
Hasty Conclusion
Weeping blood
traces limbs
outlining juice
claret mourning
baby crimson drops
blanketing
bloodbath of my soul
misjudged the depth
sharpness of dagger
plunged in your heart
pulled it out
sanguine bursts
bathe us both
shadow of you
can’t be erased
I’m encased
trail of blood
oblivion of essence
hasty conclusion.
Head-first.
Growing up, my parent's friends used to joke we were like little fish, us girls who spent most of our free time in the pool or ocean, swimming and playing. I wasn't a fish though, none of us were.
It was a stereotypical sunny day at a Florida waterpark, I was about ten years old and unafraid of water in any quantity, depth or turmoil. There were three height options to choose from, in which cliff you wanted to jump off of.
I wanted the highest cliff they offered-- 50 feet, so I waited in line with my Twin.
Along the slatted path of ramps and periodic stairs up to the top, there where signs everywhere advising guests how to jump. NO DIVING emphasized big and bold with little pictures to make sure there was no confusion.
Oh, there was no confusion. I understood perfectly. You could easily break your neck if you hit the water wrong-- but I also felt like those signs where akin to the ones next to a pool advising you the water is too shallow to dive, when really you could dive in the shallows, you just had to arch your back and shoulders up as soon as you hit the water.
I was an experienced swimmer. I had half a decade under my belt in a wide variety of aquatic situations. I'd passed every mermaid test my older sister and her friends came up with. I could hold my breath almost three-minutes if I was still and calm enough. I could swim a mile out into the big-bad ocean and back without drowning. I had this.
The whole way to the top I considered my dive.
"They can't stop me, once I jump .. that's it, I'm off, no turning back." I rationalized. "Treat it like a shallow dive so you don't go too deep," I told myself, "worst case, you swim to the bottom and push off to surface faster." A repeated mantra thought whenever the conversation with my Twin tapered.
At the top, there's a Park Attendant vocally reminding jumpers of all ages, to cross their arms over their chest and jump feet first. Most of them did, only a few flailed their arms out in a reactive impulse. When it was my turn, I nodded doe-eyed and innocent as I was given the same speech, pausing on the line in compliance, waiting for the previous jumper to clear the water.
It was in those moments, as I took a few breathes to prepare myself, that my heart began to race like a Thoroughbred out of the Kentucky Derby gate. Even now I'm not sure if I was more excited about diving off a 50 foot cliff, or diving off a 50 foot cliff because it was against the rules.
When I was given the go-ahead, my smirky-side-glance was the only warning the Park Attendant got before I sprang off the edge of the cliff with my arms out like the Olympic divers I'd seen on TV.
The fall didn't even seem to take a full second.
My hands pierced the water first, as intended, it was a good dive but with such momentum on impact I couldn't hold the formation, or arch my back like I'd meant to. I let myself coast to a stop in the water, glancing up past my feet I could tell I was deeper down than I thought I'd be. My child mind thought about it for a moment before I took a few breast-strokes further into the blue, thinking I could spring up and save myself some effort; only, in doing so, I realized it was arguably a further swim to the bottom than the light above...
I misjudged everything.
"ShitShitShit!" I thought, a tick of panic which burned up more oxygen than I had to spare, making my swim to the surface that much more of a challenge.
As I righted myself I desperately wished for a breath of air, yet had no idea how much more I'd crave it before I broke the water-line. Hands cupped like little paddles, I carved them in toward my chest and hooked out with as much even-power as I could manage, trying to establish a pace... five, six, and seven strokes in I felt the panic creeping back.
Eight, nine and ten, I didn't seem to be any closer to the flickering light of daylight I was swimming toward. I began to question if I had enough air in my lungs to make it, yet I kept swimming, determined not to stop until my face was out of the water. Somewhere between strokes fifteen and twenty, I lost the ability to count.
I could feel my lungs shrinking with the lack of breath, willing me to inhale and fill them again. I grit my teeth and continued to paddle, helpless to observe my pace faltering with the ache of muscles running low on oxygen. Helpless to prevent the frown trying to pull my lips apart or the lump in my throat threatening to finish the choking I'd already started.
I could tell by then, I was closer to the surface but it still looked so far away. I knew I didn't really have enough breath in my lungs to make it. I knew I was going to start feeling the vacuum of need grip my chest with the convulsion to inhale. "Don't do it." I thought, "Don't you do it.." thought with anger and desperation. Swimming like a teeter-todder because I could no longer coordinate my arms to work together.
When I ascended high enough in the water it began to look more shallow, bright and clear, there was hope. It snuck up on me the same way the fog of a blackout seemed to be rolling in, yet it was just enough hope to will me onward, "Just keep swimming," I told myself, like 'Finding Nemo' long before the movie came out. While I had the will to make it to the surface, my body was fighting for the ability to complete my journey.
My arms and legs started to shake with every hooking paddle and kicking push, like a car engine sputtering on fumes. The sucking sensation in my lungs began to extend to the rest of my body, up my neck clamping around the urge to cry, which only seemed to make my need to breathe more pressing. As I felt my head start to throb to the cadence of my war-drum of a heart and my body jolt with the compulsive need to suck in air, I couldn't keep my fingers together to cup the water anymore.
"Don't do it, don't, don't do it, just don't even open your mouth" I thought as my swimming became more frantic, more like clawing and climbing through the cool embrace of chlorinated waters. Those last few seconds were choppy with mini-black-outs and skewed perception, somewhere amid which I'd opened my mouth. Convulsing like a fish on a deck I felt a little water break the choked seal of my throat and I thought I was done for.
The violent desperation to breathe forced me to use one hand to plug my nose and to give up whatever stale air I had left in those caving windbags to clear the water from my throat and lungs. I felt like my entire body was going to implode...
But it didn't.
Somehow, I made it, I broke the surface with a gasping thrash that filled my lungs so fast I choked on it. I had to cough a few times to open my windpipe back up and when I did the sudden flow of air made my head spin.
"You okay?" The Lady Lifegaurd asked, standing up on her perch over the waters, no longer shaded by her umbrella. One of many who seemed to be on their toes waiting for me to pop up.
"I'm good!" I yelled as if I hadn't just been swimming for my life.
"No more jumping for you." She shouted back plainly, not bothering to chastise me for diving.
"Yeah, no-shit Lady" I thought, waving my hand at her instead, and then swimming across the surface toward the stairs as quickly as my shaky and tired body would let me.
|| another_proser ||
Pondering Persistence
driving home this past Thursday I passed a rodent that was halfway to roadkill. his head was smeared on the asphalt and aesthetically punctuated by the protruding fragments of his fractured skull. still, though, he thrashed against the yellow lane line and swung his small fists at the air because he still believed he could survive. i went wondering home and i've been laying ever since in bed next to the bullet.
Wooden Door
The child
knows what goes on inside the
wooden door.
The child hears the man yell
and the woman scream.
The child know that there,
is a bag packed for the yelling man.
The child know that when
the yelling man stops yelling,
the screaming woman will stop screaming.
The child can hear what goes on
inside the wooden door,
the child doesn't tone it out
just lingers outside
the wooden door.
The teen
knows what goes on behind the
wooden door.
The teen knows that
the yelling mans bags are packed.
The teen knows that when the
yelling man stops yelling then
the screaming women will stop screaming.
The teen knows that the screaming
woman can only push so hard.
The teen can hear what goes
on behind the wooden door even with earbuds in.
The teen knows that if the
yelling man doesn't stop yelling
and the screaming woman doesn't stop screaming
she won't listen anymore.
The young adult
knows what goes on beyond the
wooden door.
The young adult knows that
the yelling mans feet are half way out the door.
The young adult knows that the
screaming woman is pushing to hard.
The young adult know that she can't listen any more.
She couldn't listen anymore.
When the yelling man
and screaming woman found
the child, teen, and young adult
all was silent.
The yelling man didn't yell anymore
and the screaming woman didn't scream anymore,
because of that one girl.
The one girl that man the yelling man
yelling,
and the screaming woman
scream.
The one girl was the child that
saw the bag packed.
The one girl was the teen that
saw the screaming woman was pushing to hard.
The one girl was the young adult that saw
that yelling mans feet half way out the door.
The one girl is now that one angle who
sees the one family with out
there one daughter.