what they donāt tell you about winter is that you go through the 5 stages of grief every morning when itās time to leave your fluffy blankets

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@sobermo
what they donāt tell you about winter is that you go through the 5 stages of grief every morning when itās time to leave your fluffy blankets

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ā Chuck Akot, from Memoirs, Mort d'amour
i was so fucking sad when i was 14 and now when i fold my laundry or see a pool of moonlight on the floor of my bedroom i know that miracles exist. i see love in everything. love sees everything in me too
Transcribing my notes from a workshop I did last week titled Snapshot Literature: memory, self-fiction, and pictures inside the household drawer.
i don't have time to be sad about things i literally have to study and be hot at all times

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RECORD STORES IN FILMS Rock of Ages (2012) Scott Pilgrim vs The World (2010) Pretty in Pink (1986) 500 Days of Summer (2009) Cloud Atlas (2012) High Fidelity (2000) Empire Records (1995) A Clockwork Orange Ā (1971) Hearts Beat Loud (2018) Before Sunrise (1995)
First I saw friend. Then I realized it was the back 60% of girlfriend. Tbh I'll stick with friend. :)
Boyfriend (ew), pine (I like trees I guess), pussy (yay)
crabs (everything becomes crabs with enough time), bottom (of the ocean?), bud (yay! plants!!)
I saw "fame" (not sure if I want that???) and then "senate" and "win." I will put up with fame if we also get senate win.
I'm sorry but bottom, cock and kiss in the same line for me. Wtf
Ada Limón, from āCalling Things What They Areā, The Hurting Kind
ā Anne Michaels, from "Infinite Gradation," originally published in October 2017
"the shortest poem is a name" What a curious thought. To consider that a name, just a single word, can encapsulate so muchāyet so little. Perhaps it is the purest form of poetry, distilled to its essence. A name is a mark, a symbol, a sound. But in that fleeting sound, there lies the entire history of a person, a place, an idea. Take, for instance, the timeless works of Shakespeare. One could argue that Shakespeare, in all his genius, understood the power of a name better than anyone. Romeo and Julietāthose two names alone, uttered in the silence of a theater, stir emotions. The feud between the Montagues and the Capulets is not simply a feud of families but of identities, of names that hold within them generations of meaning, love, and pain. Juliet says, "What's in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet." And yet, despite her protest, the name Montague still carries weight. It is not just a word; it is a lineage, a burden, a legacy. She knows it; Romeo knows it. And with every utterance of their names, they feel both the pull of fate and the weight of history. The etymology of the word name itself is fascinating. From the Old English nama, stemming from the Proto-Germanic namĆ“, it goes back even further to the Proto-Indo-European nomen, meaning "to name" or "to call." A name, in its most ancient form, was a callāa way to summon someone or something into being. It was power, and with power came identity. It became a bond, a thread connecting individuals to their communities, their ancestors, their destiny. What is a name, then? Itās more than letters strung together. Itās a claim. A name is a gift, yet sometimes, it feels more like a sentence. In our names, we inherit legaciesāof love, but also of conflict, of expectation. From the moment weāre given a name, it begins to shape us. It becomes part of our emotional landscape. We grow into it, or sometimes we rebel against it, trying to redefine who we are apart from it. In a way, names are a mirror. They reflect back to us who we are and who we are meant to be. But they are also ever-changing, because how we are called, how we are addressed, defines how we are seen. Consider the emotions wrapped around a name: the thrill of hearing someone say your name with love, the hurt when itās spoken in anger. Thereās power in a name that is whispered, that is shouted, that is written in a letter, that is etched into stone. But, perhaps, the true weight of a name comes from its bond to someone else. When we call another by name, we acknowledge them. We validate their existence. The simple act of saying someoneās name binds us together in ways words alone cannot. And what can be more poetic than that? A name, the shortest of poems, is a bridge between hearts, a recognition of who we are in relation to one another. Shakespeareās great tragedies remind us of this. The names Hamlet, Ophelia, Macbeth, Learāeach one is a thread in a complex tapestry of emotions, connections, and consequences. But perhaps in the end, what really matters is the name we leave behind. Not because it will endure forever, but because it was the poem we lived, the one we carried with us, whispered on the lips of those we loved, and forever imprinted on the world we touched. So, yes, the shortest poem is a name. Itās a poem that, once spoken, can echo across time, across generations, across hearts.
mum says loved ones who have passed on returns to visit in dreams on the seventh day since their death. it was your seventh day last night. i dreamt of you. i find it poetic and so, so, so sad. i ran to you and hugged you. i lifted you up. i told you we love you and i hope you know it forever. i thought of you this morning in the car. i wept when one of your favourite songs came on. i cried when my mum told me that loved ones who have passed on returns to visit in dreams on the seventh day since their death. i canāt believe itās been a week.

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Bro İ hate being an academic they're making me write shit š İ thought İ was just supposed to sit in an old chair smoke & say something french every now and then š¢
āIt was a word she used often - someday.ā
ā Lois Duncan, Killing Mr. Griffin
i canāt remember what six year old me was wishing for throwing coins in the fountain and blowing on dandelions but i hope the person i am today was at least one of them
Alex Dimitrov, from Love and Other Poems; āThe Weather of Our Livesā
yes girl you are so [if i loved you less i might be able to talk about it more] [hands are unbearably beautiful] [i'll take care of you it's rotten work not to me not if it's you] [if you are intolerable let me be the one to tolerate you] [i could recognise him by touch alone] [i love you i want us both to eat well] [on purpose i love you on purpose] [whatever our souls are made of his and mine are the same] [i am half agony half hope] [you have bewitched me body and soul and i love love love you] [he is half of my soul as the poets say] [i'm sick of people saying that love is all a woman is fit for but i'm so lonely] [i love you most ardently] [let me stay tender hearted despite despite despite] [someone has to leave first this is a very old story there is no other version of this story] [mostly i want to be kind] [tell me how all this and love too will ruin us] [you said i killed you haunt me then] [someone somewhere can you understand me a little love me a little] [i will love you as misfortune loves orphans as fire loves innocence and as justice loves to sit and watch while everything goes wrong] [sorry about the blood in your mouth i wish it was mine] [who will come into my kitchen and be hungry for me] can we kiss now

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the fact that i'm no longer the same age as the protagonists of novels and films i once connected to is so heartbreaking. there was a time when I looked forward to turning their age. i did. and i also outgrew them. i continue to age, but they don't; never will. the immortality of fiction is beautiful, but cruel.