Wednesday, February 20, 2013

a sinking ship


a sinking ship

clouds of breath explode from cold conversations
and the words poured out between chattering teeth
trembling barricades
that allowed whispers to sound loud
echoing off of brick
icicles that hung
off the cheap plastic gutter
of a rundown apartment complex
while a girl stands with her back turned
because she couldn’t stand the sight
of the sad boy that was
(or wasn’t)
in front of her
ankles buried deep in snow
because they won’t plow the parking lots on Sundays at a Catholic university
the snow that was once white and stacked high
is now stomped down and brown
but the icicles hang innocent
untouched
and it looks like something out of a music video for some british folk song
that she would inevitably love
and that you would inevitably hate
your toes are numb, but you don’t mind, it suits your mood
and you can’t tell if its the cold or the nerves that are making you shake harder than high school
in the nurses office
when they showed the informational teenage suicide video
after a freshman shot himself with his father’s gun
your face is cold and snow is getting caught up in scraggly facial hair
that hasn’t been shaved in months
or touched in months
hanging defeated off of a defeated face
hairs she once ran Her hands through
and let tickle her neck
now the focal point of her disgust
and she’s crying and telling you how scared she is for you
and how scared your friends are
and how your mom doesn’t sleep at night
you light a cigarette and fall back onto the hood of a car and sink into the snow that covers it
let the smoke fight upwards against the current of the snow
and lose
the snow would always win
you find yourself thinking about the past month you’ve spent
locked in your room
with a handle of whiskey
and a guitar you can’t play
pretending to be Kurt Cobain
you could never get the ending right
and the apartment you called home
with the floor littered with crushed empty cans and turned over bottles
not a drop left in them to spill,
and the letters that you meant to send her
but you couldn’t afford stamps
those letters started out so strong
but nothing seemed that important anymore
not like it did over break
when all you needed was a 1.99 movie and the couch in her basement
and how even though it was cold, you weren’t
and how it hadn’t been that easy not to think in a while
no pills or doctors visits
you didn’t need that
her words snap you back to the present
“I can’t tie myself up to a sinking ship”
And you smile, because it was a nice metaphor
and she didn’t usually talk like that
but now you’re running towards her car and she’s fighting you off
and you’re grabbing her arm
and she pushes
hard enough to knock you on your ass
hard enough to open up your eyes
and for the first time in at least a month you are sober
and for the first time in at least a month you can see her eyes
and for the first time in at least a month you are scared
and you land in the snow where you sit and watch the flakes twirl across the sky and fall hard
 onto the ground
and onto you
until you're buried
a ship wrecked

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