It might have been so much easier.
In another life we’d buy what we’re sold, do as we’re told
and complacently grow old but never a day wiser, sensitive to changes and
arrangements that estrange us from some ill-begotten dearly held conceptions of
good and bad and right and wrong and truth and deception, the first to yell “Not
Fair,” but never dare to dwell in the supposed hell on which we blame
subliminal despair. Our days would fade
on our own pedestal, never to hear the winds of change as they call out to us,
and if the tree in the forest were to fall, it wouldn’t make a sound to us if
we’re not there to hear it.
It might have been so much easier.
The distant past isn’t always so distant, its shadow ever
just a step or two behind me when I wandered, always wondering if the willows I
passed would wisp away my worries. I
hope they have. I fear they haven’t. And so I went about my days with dark and
silent reservations, locked within my contemplation, praying that the end is
truly the end.
I looked up to you
and asked for help, for some direction.
I didn’t notice just how much you speak, all words, words, words, so
many words I didn’t notice how they kept me weak. I was distracted by all the pretty words.
I didn’t see there was no soul behind those eyes, the
leeches sucked me dry before I woke, and I had not yet learned to fear the
Siren’s Song. There I was, face down in
the mud, couldn’t break free from the weeds and that ooze would take forever to
wash out, and yet, for the moment, it felt so warm there in the mud.
I had only asked you for directions, but for all the pretty
words I began to sing a love song. Would
you like to hear a love song?
This is a love song.
Philosophers philosophize, ideas studied and memorized, ages
after their authors die. When have you
last seen the world through truly open eyes?
Some people need to bleed to know that they’re alive.
I wanted to see what you saw, be where you are, breathe that
air, so clear and unobstructed. Instead
I traveled day to day, sheltered and protected, wishing I could fly.
You told me I wasn’t strong enough, wasn’t fast enough,
couldn’t do it, shouldn’t want it, that I just needed sleep. Then you turned and cried in a corner where
you thought I couldn’t see you weep.
I couldn’t bear to watch you bare, weak and whimpering,
couldn’t muster up the sentiment to pity.
This is a love song in a different key.
I pulled out of the mud and tore at the weeds. Some people need to march in chains before
they wander free. You’d pointed right
instead of left and falsely called it “Truth,” told me there was nothing
without proof, and wouldn’t let me speak.
I wrested free, not easily, stood on the riverbank, one foot
on the shore, and I wanted to step, I really wanted to step. Why couldn’t I step? Just how many hits and bruises, cuts and
lacerations and just how much degradation would it take to be heard? Some people need to live mute to put thoughts
into words.
And I tried to leave it all behind, but was it too soon? This is a love song set to a different tune,
and I Hate you! Dear God, you scare me
and I Hate you! Why are you still here? Why do I still hear your Devil’s whisper in
my ear, telling me to slow the fuck down?
When did you get so strange?
This is a love song in a different fucking range! Some people must be torn to shreds and
cleansed before they’re born again.
Philosophers philosophize, but all your words, my friend,
were lies, and I want to see something else, be somewhere else, breathe cleaner
air, water running cold over my feet.
I do not pretend that after hearing hours of my desperate
explanations you’ll begin to understand.
That’s quite alright.
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