You are unaccountable:
the way your eyebrow raises in that way that says, “You’re talking out your ass aren’t you?”,
the way your mystical mouth manages to enunciate everything I need to hear,
and the way I can’t manage, no matter how hard I try, to get that thing you said about dreams
out of my head.
To love is indeed a strange verb.
What is it, exactly, that you are doing?
It is a verb—
that bit is undeniable—
but what kind?
The mountain air broke
through St. Christopher’s
lungs,
trying to illustrate to him
precisely how dangerous
things are,
and he breathes it in and
breaks his lungs, and he
says,
“I am sorry wind, please
see that I love you dearly
now,
and see that I see what
you are desperately trying
to do,
but know I must travel on
toward the unknowable.
You act out of love,
and for that I love you
but
we all know the things
we do in the name of
love
can certainly contain
the most selfish motive.
You love me because I
love you, and everything
you are,
but you do not love
me for me,
you love me for what
it is I can
do.
How can you love me
in myself,
when I don’t know myself
from me?
So I take my lime green accessories,
and I water down my waterproof boots,
and my one-person tent has been prepared,
and the infinite beckons me on, broken lungs
and all.
You big-breasted whore of Babylon, Be Gone!
I can take no more curvaceous connivery.
And yet,
and yet,
I want you all so bad.
No No No No No
Go Go Go Go Go
Do you reckon I miss you?
Well, know goddamn well I do.
I am cursed to love.
It’s all I know to do.
But take your strappy sandals,
and take your fantastic words,
and take your knowing smile
away from the unworthy.
One cannot worship at the altar and physically communicate.
It, unfortunately, doesn’t work that way, and I know you are
not real.
It can’t be.
It’s oh so good
and I want to touch,
but I walk. Walk on.”
He takes up his
walking staff,
fills his water
canteen once,
takes a sip from
the stream,
and leaves—a shell of
a man.
1 comment:
passive aggressive much?
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