Tonight's moon is cresting, the shape of a fat D in a book of alphabets. It is a sagging belly, the end of a promise. The sky is thumbprinted and smoky. A lid, not a dome.
I've been awake for three days. First comes weariness, then the second wind brought on by stolen swigs in back rooms and offices, from numerous coffee cups. Then a slow, dull edge, grumbling at my concentration. My awareness recedes. I am forgetful, but I can't nod off. And finally, I achieve a slow lucidity. I couldn't sleep if I tried. I could remain like this forever, completing task after task at an even, rhythmic pace. Routine is my friend. But even when the unexpected occurs, I rifle through the file of responses in my mind and everything is okay. I am static. I am immovable. I can reach unfeeling.
Only, when I go outside at night, the emptiness of the world around me feels like a muttered threat. I suck in the dark air, and the cardboard cutouts of tree branches scrape together in the breeze. Somewhere, a dog lets out a high-pitched bark, only one. For all I know, it could be an imaginary dog, a canine on my brain. I am utterly alone, closed in under the sky.
But the sun always rises, and I can see the distance without wearing my cheap welfare glasses, I can stand outside and not only feel but watch my own hands shaping space. And I sense a vague dissatisfaction. Everything is too simple in the light, and too safe.
I've been awake for three days. First comes weariness, then the second wind brought on by stolen swigs in back rooms and offices, from numerous coffee cups. Then a slow, dull edge, grumbling at my concentration. My awareness recedes. I am forgetful, but I can't nod off. And finally, I achieve a slow lucidity. I couldn't sleep if I tried. I could remain like this forever, completing task after task at an even, rhythmic pace. Routine is my friend. But even when the unexpected occurs, I rifle through the file of responses in my mind and everything is okay. I am static. I am immovable. I can reach unfeeling.
Only, when I go outside at night, the emptiness of the world around me feels like a muttered threat. I suck in the dark air, and the cardboard cutouts of tree branches scrape together in the breeze. Somewhere, a dog lets out a high-pitched bark, only one. For all I know, it could be an imaginary dog, a canine on my brain. I am utterly alone, closed in under the sky.
But the sun always rises, and I can see the distance without wearing my cheap welfare glasses, I can stand outside and not only feel but watch my own hands shaping space. And I sense a vague dissatisfaction. Everything is too simple in the light, and too safe.
VIEW 25 of 32 COMMENTS
i can't even put in to words how much admiration i have for your courage and strength.
you're an incredible lady! <3 <3
hmmm, maybe we should hook up ;]