Church St Paul (1964-66) in Bocholt, Germany, by Gottfried Bƶhm. Photo by Theresa Diestel from 2022.

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Church St Paul (1964-66) in Bocholt, Germany, by Gottfried Bƶhm. Photo by Theresa Diestel from 2022.

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name 1 thing you cant see 1 thing you cant touch 1 thing you cant hear 1 thing you cant smell 1 thing you cant taste and everything you cant have
so. i graduated and yes. we were never in the same room again. Yes. i still love her but its all mental now. She was the first person to make me feel like a whole human being worth loving and like the lowliest worm to exist. She loved the me she created. She wouldnt let me be butch, i repressed myself for years. I hate her, i still love her, but most of all. I'm past it. I am an out and proud butch lesbian, something she would have mocked me for, being a homophobic closeted bisexual. Thank you for helping me mature, and fuck you for making me be on medications.

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iām glad your sickness by Marina Tsvetaeva
this is probably a side effect of all my best friends being musical prodigies or basketball stars, but its really a death sentence if you love playing music or doing sports too, because whats a few tunes on the ukulele to your girlfriend selling out concerts, and like whats being able to swim well when your best friend scores winning shots in international games, so what am i left with? i do math for fun? i punch the wall? the fact that i do latin is probably the most unique thing about me and man i just want to play an instrument or be a champion boxer or something but all the categories are full besides being the weird nerd friend
3 years later and i've realized so much. people arent as flawlessly talented as they seem when you're 15. I am on antidepressants and about to graduate and my life has meaning, if i want to be interesting i have to do things. and i've done these things. The past few months have been an apology tour of sorts for how i acted while self destructive, and it's given me new found faith in peoples willingness to start again. I have a life and it's my own and not an imitation of the people i idolize for the first time.
ON CHILDHOOD / 1. Evening sun by Jane Kenyon 1983 / 2. Water for the people by Paul Dāamato / 3. Alain de Botton / 4. this tweet š„ŗ / 5. Photography by Istiak Karim / 6. Vita Nova by Louise Glück, 1999 / 7. Life on Mars by Tracy K. Smith 2011 / 8. Nikki Giovanni, from āAdulthood IIā / 10. A comment under āThe Orangeā by Wendy Cope
another age by Rachel Eliza Griffiths
Recipe for Happiness
by Lawrence Ferlinghetti
One grand boulevard with trees with one grand cafe in sun with strong black coffee in very small cups.
One not necessarily very beautiful man or woman who loves you.
One fine day.

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GRB 080319BĀ
For a month, I was a smudge.Ā
A mute monk in the bathtub, lukewarm water running as dull colors rolled around my head like fractured, aged marbles. Thoughts lost strength before fruition. I called out of work once a week, faked a cough, a car accident, another funeral. When I did make the drive out to the office, I spent most of the time typing a word, deleting the word, and typing the word again. I stopped taking calls. Mary left me beautiful voice messages. I listened to them while I laid on the couch, sprawled out like an active disease, furious tears streaming down my face. I knew it was stupid. A feeling cannot kill you. But then, I was being diminished. I was receding.Ā
I know you donāt feel well right now. But listen, I have these neighbors who still have their Christmas lights hanging up. Itās April. I sorta hope they leave them up all year round.Ā
I stayed frozen for a few weeks.Ā
Vitamin D and herbal teas, coffee and long novels. But then, I canāt explain it. It was Friday afternoon. Just a Friday afternoon.Ā
It began when I left the office. A slow bloom rose throughout my entire body.Ā
I noticed how all the buildings stood scraping against the most gorgeous, thin blue of the dying afternoon, rising evening. The wind felt kind. I didnāt go home. I went to the supermarket and held an orange in my hand, feeling the small indents with my thumbs, smelling the bright zest. It was as though everything was real again. That night, I bought a pack of cigarettes. I hadnāt smoked since I was nineteen. But I inhaled and let out a giant laugh at how lightheaded I felt, I walked through the streets like that, laughing and laughing, the laughter like the magicianās scarf being pulled out and out. It was a fantastic feeling. I felt fearless. As though I could scoop the fear and pain and shit out of myself like a pudding. I had capabilities.Ā
When I got home, I rushed in and had a shot of blueberry vodka and opened the windows and called Mary; she answered within a couple of rings. That gorgeous rodeo clown. I loved her as much as I loved anything.Ā
I never thought Iād hear your voice again, she said. But this worries me, yāknow. How blue was the sky today?
Iām coming to see you, I said. Not tonight. But soon. Iāll stumble on your porch like a speedball. The sky was fantastic. Iām smoking.
Hm, she said. Listen, stay out of trouble. A feeling cannot kill you. Iāll save some tea for you. Come anytime. Come anytime.Ā
I couldnāt sleep. I played the same image in my mind, again and again. And words fizzed in and out too quickly for me to catch them. A church of nukes. Do you understand what you are signing? Perfume made of whale semen. Dominoes.Ā
In the morning, I could feel the angels looking over me. I imagined them like teenagers, shooting the shit, smoking and coughing and pointing. I spent the weekend in bars, meeting everyone on earth. A woman with a strong russian accent who told me the world was going down the toilet and we were all there for the ride. A man who asked me for three cigarettes and then told me he had coke if I wanted some. I spread a little on my gums. But it was a fifteen minute headache, it had nothing on the feeling within me, the glow which propelled and drove me around. I fucked the russian woman.Ā
I called out of work for the week, claimed Iād contracted HIV and needed time to grieve. I felt awful about the lie. It was ridiculous. But anything could happen. And I wasnāt wasting my time at a computer when I could see patterns in the streets. I wore a long, leather coat and wrapped it around my waist. And beneath, a black thong strung across my hips. I felt like a machine, I felt electric as I walked through the advertisement pus of Times Square, a cigarette beneath my teeth. I rode the trains for hours, befriending the other passengers. And for a moment, I forgot my address. It was nine in the morning. It was the middle of the night. I got nervous anytime I saw a police officer; there was a criminal in my heart. What was I doing?Ā
I went down to the village to visit Mary as promised. I felt breathless, sensitive to light. I was tired. Itād been years since sleep. I felt as though I was dying. A star exploding in reverse. Mary would know what to do.Ā
I knocked on her door and she answered as quick as she answered the phone. I smelled her vanilla scent. It made me nauseous. But I was so glad to see her; so glad she was there. I dated Mary for eight years. There was nobody on earth who knew me better than she did.Ā
You donāt look great, she said. Are you eating?
Not really, I told her as i walked into her apartment. I feel like I need a touch up. My engine is black. Iām running out of oil. I think I lost my job. I donāt know what day it is.Ā
Itās Saturday, she said. Three in the afternoon. Itās May and spring is here. Have a seat.Ā
I sat on her couch.Ā
I think Iāve been hexed, I said. A spell has been put on me. A poison.Ā
Youāve been here before, she said. Remember? That arrest in Ohio? Disturbing the peace? And the outburst in the museum. Banned from the gas station. A wild iris in your eyes. A desire for mountains. The call is coming from inside the house, Adam.
Mary gave me a cherry tart. I ate half of it and began to weep. Mary gave me a sleeping tablet. And when I woke up, I was horrified.Ā
When I got home, Mary had left me a voicemail. I laid down naked on the floor and listened.Ā
Youāre a wife with cold feet. Shivering in the dressing room. Youāre an astronaut grazing the face of the moon, blind to the wars on earth. Youāre brave. Youāre pathetic. You go to the amusement park to weep. You walk out onto the avenue to dance. You sneak into a club. And you feel nothing when the band plays, the gilded brass and vulgar scatting.Ā
And maybe you deserve it.Ā
āI am lonely, yet not everybody will do. I donāt know why, some people fill the gaps and others emphasize my loneliness.ā
āAnaĆÆs Nin
The love was there.
(NOT BASED OFF ANY CURRENT EXPERIENCES)
Jeanette Winterson / Ashe Vernon / Clementine von Radics, "In a Dream You Saw a Way to Survive" / P.D, "there is no absolution for the fallen, only dying" / Sky Ferreia, "Sad Dreams" / ? / Lidia Yuknavitch, "The Chronology of Water: a Memoir" / ?
variations on a theme by elizabeth bishop, john murillo
mary oliver, from october // vicente aleixandre, fromĀ sound of the war // sarah ruhl, melancholy play // colette, from on tour (tr. by matthew ward) // augusto giacometti, die vertreibung aus dem paradies (1934) // linda gregg,Ā from slow dance by the ocean // jeff vandermeer, from annihilation // anaĆÆs nin, from journals volume ii // virginia woolf, from orlando

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Vladimir Mayakovsky, 20th Century Russian Poetry: Silver and Steel; fromĀ āUnfinished Poemsā, tr. Bernard Meares
Love hate relationship with summer :-/