I shut my eyes tightly entering the world behind my eyelids; the hopelessness of being visionless is swiftly out of sight. Colors birthed from pressure create a suddenly starry night begging me to loose these bonds before they break through this porcelain skin. Sound is abruptly blurred, creating space for the faintest of beating…
Here I am. Silence has become me. Perfect peace suddenly knows me. I can just be.
From the darkness of unmeasured depths logic remembers its name and quickly reminds me that I’m only seconds away from ending this quiet reverie… I must open my eyes.
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Digging in the archives 04.08.08
Digging in the archives 03.18.08
I ache for something real, but I'm weary of hope.
I'm tired of digging, remaining so politely unearthed.
Rending my heart to the mirage of depth, I find that I'm sick of grasping at these mere shadows only to descend into these unmerciful laments.
The tide is coming in...
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Little Blue Umbrella
I can count on one hand the number of times my family went camping. We're beach people... Sleeping in a tent while bugs crawl into our ears doesn't appeal to all of us! It's the time that's currently being represented by my thumb that I happened to recall today. It was as I was walking in the pouring rain through the streets of Philadelphia, huddled under a mangled blue umbrella, that I remembered one of the first of the few memories I have of camping.
My brave parents were selfless enough to attempt camping with their five children (10 and under). I don't remember the to and from or even the where and when. I just remember the part where all seven of us were packed into the tent preparing to fall asleep. It was raining, both my parents were frazzled from their efforts at setting up camp while trying to rein in their five unruly children and quite ready to collapse. I can clearly remember my dad trying to explain to us why we couldn't touch the tent fabric while it was wet. “Guys, do not touch the tent fabric while it’s raining because it will allow the water to leak into the tent and WE WILL GET WET!”
Well I don’t need to explain how the letter of the law arouses sin… I was born into my rebellious ways and I had to touch the fabric and see what he was talking about! I wasn’t the only one… Soon they had at least four out of five of their children directly ignoring the warning that was given. We proceeded to finger paint the thin ceiling of our small tent in a wildly inspired fashion. Or at least that’s how we saw things at the time. It didn’t take long before the rain made good on its promise to seep through the fingerprints of our curiosity and splash us with the consequences of our free will choices.
Needless to say, our camping trip came to an abrupt end and what had seemed to already be an eternally exhausting excursion for my parents became more like hell in the woods. My father’s poor head was already on its way to grey, and I’m quite positive that we helped it along on this memorable camping trip.
So here I am trying to stay somewhat dry on my journey to the subway station, and failing quite miserably, and I can’t help but contemplate how that childhood memory almost seems a shadow to the realities in my life now. I can’t help but picture the sky above me as the tent over my heart, my imagination conjuring up images of my now adult fingers tracing the fabric of my starry ceiling. I had never dreamt of the flood to which I was beckoning.
This time there was no fatherly warning about where I’d lay my fingers or what I’d reach for. This time it was just me and my desperate longing to explore and touch the outermost edge of my own comprehension. This time it’s just me clinging to a little blue umbrella, begging it to keep me from this rain that I cannot will away. I can’t help but feel for the umbrella, as it cannot bear the onslaught from the sky. Even with all of its courage and heart, this little blue umbrella will not be able to keep me from this flood. There’s just no staying dry this time.
I guess it’s time to learn to swim.
My brave parents were selfless enough to attempt camping with their five children (10 and under). I don't remember the to and from or even the where and when. I just remember the part where all seven of us were packed into the tent preparing to fall asleep. It was raining, both my parents were frazzled from their efforts at setting up camp while trying to rein in their five unruly children and quite ready to collapse. I can clearly remember my dad trying to explain to us why we couldn't touch the tent fabric while it was wet. “Guys, do not touch the tent fabric while it’s raining because it will allow the water to leak into the tent and WE WILL GET WET!”
Well I don’t need to explain how the letter of the law arouses sin… I was born into my rebellious ways and I had to touch the fabric and see what he was talking about! I wasn’t the only one… Soon they had at least four out of five of their children directly ignoring the warning that was given. We proceeded to finger paint the thin ceiling of our small tent in a wildly inspired fashion. Or at least that’s how we saw things at the time. It didn’t take long before the rain made good on its promise to seep through the fingerprints of our curiosity and splash us with the consequences of our free will choices.
Needless to say, our camping trip came to an abrupt end and what had seemed to already be an eternally exhausting excursion for my parents became more like hell in the woods. My father’s poor head was already on its way to grey, and I’m quite positive that we helped it along on this memorable camping trip.
So here I am trying to stay somewhat dry on my journey to the subway station, and failing quite miserably, and I can’t help but contemplate how that childhood memory almost seems a shadow to the realities in my life now. I can’t help but picture the sky above me as the tent over my heart, my imagination conjuring up images of my now adult fingers tracing the fabric of my starry ceiling. I had never dreamt of the flood to which I was beckoning.
This time there was no fatherly warning about where I’d lay my fingers or what I’d reach for. This time it was just me and my desperate longing to explore and touch the outermost edge of my own comprehension. This time it’s just me clinging to a little blue umbrella, begging it to keep me from this rain that I cannot will away. I can’t help but feel for the umbrella, as it cannot bear the onslaught from the sky. Even with all of its courage and heart, this little blue umbrella will not be able to keep me from this flood. There’s just no staying dry this time.
I guess it’s time to learn to swim.
Labels:
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kids,
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Photography,
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wilson
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Admission
"Bind me up in nickels and dimes
clothe my unrelenting pride.
Will you still meet me beyond next years demise?
Masking colorful dreams behind blind eyes,
I torture my desire and suffocate my screaming hunger.
I am a mere thief.
I steal mercy and beg for unconditional peace.
Tell me, has truth ever looked so appalling?
Find me.
Leave me.
Break me.
Keep me.
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