Sunday, November 3, 2013

At Least I'm Something Pretty Now

my heart breaks
like the ground beneath me
under the weight
of the burdens that i carry
my stomach is bloated,
full of all the insults that i swallow
i seek relief in purging
these poisonous thoughts,
they slip out of my eyes
as despair in the form of raindrops
that liquid loneliness
distorts my vision as i look in the mirror
and take the insults that come from
the one who looks like me
but hates me,
just like everyone else does
in the world that breaks under my feet
the earth quakes and breaks
and suddenly i see that
at least one thing knows
how my heart feels
only when i’m eight feet under
do i feel at peace
no more in pieces,
in shards that can cut down
because no one should be shut down
or put in the corner,
baby i’ve waited for the day
when i’m finally a part of something,
finally useful.
at least now i can make the flowers bloom

at least now i’m something pretty

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Black Swan

Head spinning.
Heart racing
To reveal the phantom
You're facing.

No eyes--
Only holes that hold
Your darkest fantasies.
Nightmares that morph into
Shadows that take shape of
Your innermost fears.

Not safe
Even where you used to call home
Because the heart is the home--
The womb that nursed
Your fears to reality.
Only way out is through fatality.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Why I Will Not Get Out of Bed


Why i will not get out of bed, you ask?
I'll simply tell you why.
It's the cold floor on bare feet
That makes me want to cry.

It's the school and homework
That I know lie ahead.
These are the reasons
I will not get out of bed.

Where warm blankets and soft sheets
Are always there for me.
Out of every place I could go,
My bed is where I'd be.

Too much action and thinking
Is expected every day.
These are the very reasons
In my bed I want to stay.

Bury Me: Inspired by Frances Harper's "Bury Me in a Free Land"

You may dig a hole wherever you please;
In California or the Florida Keys.
Make it where unicorns run free.
Just as long as there's no poverty.
My eyes would not close if I knew,
The things that people here say or do.
Bury me in the lines of a poem,
As long as in the stanzas free men can roam.
Lay me to rest where bullying is gone,
Even if that is on the edge of dawn.
A world where self-image is poisoned like an apple,
My tomb shall not dare to dapple.
I dare not rest where hurricanes have destroyed.
To live underground, I would be annoyed.
If I saw bombs fly and people die,
In death I still would manage to cry.
My soul shall not depart until I am at peace,
And know that this destruction shall cease.
I do not need a plaque or sign
To prove this spot is truly mine.
All that I need to be brave
Is the promise that this desolate land can be saved.

...Always

I cannot tell a lie,
I did not chop down the tree.
So believe me when I say to you,
There's no end to your beauty.

A Hera among shallow Aphrodites,
Sweeter than night's first star.
The most difficult riddle,
How I wonder what you are.

I aim to be your eyes,
And guide you through darker days.
No matter the circumstance,
In my heart, gold you will stay.

In Waiting

Unread notes on your desk
Your inbox full of
Unread texts

You lived a day ago,
But now it's today.
I still don't understand
Why you'd throw
Your life away.

You left behind
A trail of dust
And confusion in my mind.

Life was good I thought.
It was as good as it gets.
But now you lay
A splattered mess on the parking lot.
How could you jump with no regrets?

A big mess you left me.
I thought you ought to know.
Do you feel the least bit guilty?

Sleep is rare now that you're gone.
My dreams house so much despair.
I cry every night,
Hoping you'll be back at dawn.
But all I have is a pillow that smells of your hair.

To me, you are a coward
And a murderer
For making this life so hard.

How could you leave me with a broken heart
And a message on the answering machine
That you had no intent
To tear us apart,
At the weakened seam.

You said a world so cold
Is no place for a love
Like ours to unfold.

You said you look ahead
To the day we meet again.
But for now, you said,
Don't dwell on the dead,
We'll meet again where there exists no pain.

Exposed

I don't want you to see my scars,
But they're displayed
Like bugs in glass jars.

My blood congeals,
My wounds won't heal,
Won't let me be the person
I know is real.

All people do is say,
"Rub some dirt on it",
But they keep shoveling
hurt on it.

I live with my decisions
And I live with my pain.
My heart is weary
And tears fall like rain.

I hate who I am or
At least the girl in the mirror
That I see.
I can't look at my reflection
Without feeling guilty.

Ashamed of the pig
That stares back with
Lifeless eyes.
Embarrassed of the thing
That sits there and cries.

What sickens me most
Is my immense self-pity
And my need
To be called pretty.

The other half of me shouts,
"Get up, do something!"
Don't just whimper and sob.
Clean yourself up, you worthless slob

Stop feeling bad for yourself
And change who you are.
Put on a smile
And shine like a star.

But while stars seem
Like they gleam,
They're only their
schemes.

The white-toothed smiles
Are painted on,
The despair polished out of the eyes.
Their appearances, based on lies.

And the shining stars
Are just as hopeless
And faded as
The dead ones are.

But all stars did shine once,
Before they fell.
Back when bodies were just shells,
Not personal hells.

Back when
Personalities mattered,
Before the good ideals
Shattered.

Can we go back to that time
When everything was beautiful?
Or is that now
Impossible?

Death of Faith

sealed with a kiss
are the slits on her wrist

blood like tears
spout from her fears

she took a knife
to end her strife

sealedwithakissbloodliketearsshetookaknife

she ended her life.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Do you play chess?

Do you play chess?
Said the man who
silences his wife with his fists.

Do you play chess?
Said the bully who
pummels the other kids.

Do you play chess?
Said the man who
stole the woman's wallet at gunpoint.

Do you play chess?

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Please comment!

Please please please can someone comment on my works?? I neeeeed feedback and fully appreciate/welcome it. It's frustrating to see people viewing it, but on commenting on it, so please feel free to write even just some encouraging words or perhaps an idea as to what write next....summer's almost here so i'll be writing much more often in a few weeks.

Just to let you know also, most of these works are either written on my free time or were written for something in school. I have a whole bunch of poetry from last year's creative writing class that i will be posting in the coming days.

Once again, I appreciate you (whoever you are) for even viewing my work :)

Life is like that too, by the way


You know when the sky turns grey,
and you get storms?

Life is like that too, by the way.

The sun tucks away in the nooks
of the clouds, and darkness prevails
for what seems like a millennium.
When you feel that the light may never
triumph again.

Life is like that too, by the way.

A balloon slips out of a child’s grasp
and rockets upward in a lazy prance.
The wind tickles the rubber,
sending shivers up the string.
The cold reaches the air caged inside,
and when it feels like everything is frigid,
it pops.

Life is like that too, by the way.

The rain packs up and the clouds
move on.
The sun emerges and smiles encouragingly.
“I’ll always be back,” he says.

Life is like that too, by the way.

Dreams of Us: A Pantoum


I dream of us.
We share a kiss.
You disappear like dust,
leaving seconds of bliss.

We share a kiss,
our hearts and their beats,
leaving seconds of bliss
til next time we meet.

Our hearts and their beats
dance the tango.
Til next time we meet,
memories sweet like mango.

Dance the tango.
Melt into one.
Memories sweet like mango
fade with the setting sun.


Melt into one.
You disappear like dust,
fade into the setting sun.
I dream of us.

A Letter to Who Cares


Dear Heart breakers,

I don't sing or dance.
I'm not skinny or sun-kissed,
and my clothes don't come from Abercrombie,
Hollister or Ralph Lauren.

Do you think I'm pretty?

All signs point to NO.
And maybe they never will say yes,
but I couldn't honestly care less if
you miss out on me.

You think that beauty is the smallest pant size.
You think bigger boobs are more important
than bigger hearts.
You think beauty can be found in
the rolling hills of breasts and valleys of dipping hips.

You don't look to the snow white smiles.
You don't bother to explore the vast uncharted territory of my intellect.
No one dares to test the waters
of my bubbly personality
or swim in the uneven depths of my eyes.
You feel my skin on your skin,
but don't feel the pitter-patter of my heartbeat footsteps.

Beauty, to you, only sits on the skin,
only lies in the hollow of my back,
the curve of my legs,
the slope of my neck.

You don't realize that underneath
is a pulse that runs to my heart.
The heart that beats with love,
love wasted on someone who sees me,
but not me.

I want you to hear the words
that flow from the lips you kiss.
I want you to hold the hands that roam.
I want you to tell me
that beauty does not begin to define
what I am.

What my freckles are,
every story-telling crease in my hand,
my fingers, my lips.

Until you look at me like
I have looked at you forever,
until you stop being
so thick-headed, so shallow, so moronic,
don’t waste my time.

As they say, there are plenty of
fish in the sea.
And I bet some of them are
willing to wade into the pools of my individuality.
 
Sincerely,
The Truly Beautiful Girl

Have I?

Have I touched a life? A heart? A soul?
Or am I as empty as a bowl after my morning cereal?
Have I postponed the knife that beckons death?
Have I made a difference in a life outside myself?

How far does my pool ripple?
Have my waves been influential?
Have they swept someone off their feet?
And made them feel complete?

Have I sparked a light of hope in
someone who's given their self to sin?
Have I drowned the sorrowful cries
out of someone's lungs and eyes?

What have I done for one other than me?
Have I shown someone how beautiful they are in reality?
Have I told them how their laughter flutters?
Or how they gleam with every word they utter?

Numerous souls pass me in the hall,
And I must wonder if I've inspired them at all.
Do they know that after I leave this place,
I'll still remember their face?

Out of sight, but not out of mind.
Do they realize that they are one-of-a-kind?
A gem that cannot compare.
A pearl that is most rare.

The entirety of humanity is most unique.
Every single person, no matter how meek,
Creates a ripple on the Earth,
We humans never understand how much we're worth.

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

I'll Get There

once again, this is a fairly unrefined poem, but i needed to publish it without changing anything, in the raw. Enjoy :)







See that dot out there on the horizon?
That little blip that would not trouble a radar for miles?
That's my future.

Yes, it's hard to see and far far away,
but it's my future all right.
I could identify it with my eyes closed.

The last time my mom brought home Chinese take-out,
I snatched up my fortune, like I always did,
hungering more for the slip of white paper that hinted
of my fate than the actual sour, savory General Tso's
that quenched my momentary appetite.
But appetite is only temporary, while the
succulent taste of foresight lingers on the tongue forever.

I lost count of how many
"A surprise will be waiting for you"'s
or "Patience is more valuable than anything"'s
touched my fingers.
But what I failed to realize is all
those fleeting words of wisdom will ever be
on those tiny pieces of paper
is meaningless letters set up in a pattern
to trick the mind into believing
that our true outcome can be found in
a Chinese restaurant enveloped in a
plastic wrapper and crispy cookie.

Fortune cookie, more like fraud wafer.

Last week, I threw out some six wads
of crumpled fabricated finality.
They lay defeated
on my dresser
for weeks wondering
when they would come true

I didn't tell them because
I didn't want to break their
fragile paper hearts.
I guess the garbage bin lining
told them of their failure.

Now with the misguided taunters of fate
safely stuffed in the trash,
I began to live with my eyes closed.
Like that Skywalker boy,
I tried to sense the world without
my eye's deception.

Remember that dot? It's still minuscule,
but it grows everyday,
just as I do.
I learn to experience the world one surprise at a time.
I may be blinded by the possibilities, but I've still got the dot in sight.
It blinks its position like the light atop a lighthouse,
guiding my ship to the harbors
of the future.
I don't know where this harbor is yet,
and I've tried to find in on Google Maps with no luck.
This destination must be found alone
and will not make itself known.

I may not have a clue as to what the future holds,
but just the idea of a million different possibilities
smolders in my heart like an ember that refuses
to sizzle out.

I'm not quite sure where I'm going,
but I'll get there.

Friday, May 10, 2013

Are you reading this now?


Okay so please keep in mind this is a rough draft but I wanted to post this..I plan on giving it to my English teacher. Anyway, basically the idea is that not all literature should be analyzed to death like the damn red wheelbarrow and how it represented i don't know what. Poetry is meant to be enjoyed. So here it is...



Are you reading this right now?
Where are you?
Does it matter anyhow?

Are you reading this right now in English class?
Forced to assess every asset
From the curtain color to
The cacophony used
In this gritty group of
Cluttered crap
That you're taught
To believe
Actually means something
Besides the literal
Truth is
I've arrayed these words to
Appear pretty and poised and appealing
To the eye when all I'm trying to teach you
Is sometimes things don't make sense
And you can't let rules fence you in
Unless you want to find yourself
Encased in a identical ideal
You won't always be able
To decipher symbols like how
This poem is portraying life.
I haven't got all the answers
So how could you be Expected to
Know why I just capitalized the e in expected
When it means nothing to me or you.
Focus on the important facts and don't bs the rest
Just discard the diarrhea of silly assumptions
That everything's got some hidden meaning
This poems not a hieroglyphic
I hereby give you the permission to tell your
Teacher mr or mrs whatshisorhername
Theres no underlying statement and
Sometimes things are simpler than
They seem
No sir there's no apostrophe no meter No overstatement no rhyme scheme
That'll make you scream from extreme screening
Of these lengthy lines
That slowly unravel like twine
See that slant rhyme
Savor it don't decipher it.
Words and in turn poems are
Here to entertain not to hurt your brain.
Teachers let me make this easy
So you don't make your students queasy
Stop with the aggravating translating and debating
And make with the appreciating

Are you reading this now?

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Beginning of Novel titled "Unexplainable"


UNEXPLAINABLE 
KRISTIN FISHER



"...Monsters are real, and ghosts are real too. They live inside us, and sometimes, they win." –Stephen King

1
Alex


“Alex, put a jacket on,” I said. Alex sat, doubled over in one of the dining room chairs. He looked up at me, but found his knotted shoelaces more important. They seemed to grow more tangled with every touch of his fingers.
“Here, let me help, Alex.” I squatted down and quickly looped his lace into a bow—double­knotted so they wouldn’t come undone when he played at recess. “Go grab your jacket, Alex. It’s hanging over the recliner for you.” He looked up again, but didn’t move from his seat. I let out a huff of impatient air. I picked up his jacket for him, tucking it under my arm.
“Alex, let’s go. We don’t want to keep school waiting, do we?” “They will wait for me!?” This was meant to be a statement, but Alex was afraid they
wouldn't.
I sighed. “Yes Alex, they will wait.” He happily ran out the front door. Through the glass of the window pane, I watched him clamber into the passenger seat of my car. I scooped up my backpack, and nearly forgot Alex’s sack lunch on the top shelf in the refrigerator. I grabbed the brown paper bag with “Alex” printed on it in large Sharpie­drawn capital letters. There was no note from Mom taped to the front. I remember when she put notes in my sack lunches. That was over ten years ago. Twenty­one­year­olds don’t get notes from their mothers in their lunches anymore. They’re grown­ups now. Mom. Such an ill­fitting word to describe the woman who gave birth to Alex and I. It could have fit when I was younger, Alex’s age, 11. But the tides change when you suddenly have an autistic “accident child” on your hands. Most parents leave their
children savings bonds or their house. Mine left me with Alex.


2
Leaving


One week after we took Alex to the doctor, Mom left. He was four and our neighbor at the time, Bill, tried to teach him how to play baseball. With no father around (his whereabouts are irrelevant), Mom thought it a great idea to have a fatherly figure play with Alex. It was late fall, the trees almost bare. On the ground lay the corpses of the fallen leaves. Reds, browns, oranges...Alex would always laugh when they crunched underneath his light­up velcro shoes. I could smell the wilting earth on his hair for weeks, as if the two of us were still nestled in a pile of leaves.
The four of us: Bill, Mom, Alex, and I were crowded in the yard between ours and Bill’s house. A plastic softball sat atop a tee. Alex wielded a plastic bat, which drooped in his loose grip. He wore a neon green windbreaker. It was impossible to lose Alex anywhere in that thing. The only thing brighter than that jacket was Alex’s smile, radiant as a carefree child’s should be. That day, his face was void of that exuberant grin. We thought he might be getting a cold.
“You ready, champ?” Bill called. I hated when he called Alex that. It reminded me of those dads who shove their sons into Little League baseball. Mom stood behind Alex, adjusted his posture and grip on the bat. She stepped to avoid getting hit, either by the baseball or the bat.
“Okay, Alex. Swing!” Alex stood, still holding the bat, unresponsive. “Swing, Alex!” Bill tried again. Still nothing.
“All right, let’s try tossing it, Alex.” Bill picked up the fake baseball, strangely small looking and crushable in his large man hands. “Eye on the ball, Alex!” Bill called. I rolled my eyes. He tossed the ball lightly in the air. The ball landed with a cushioned thud on the ground at Alex’s feet.
“You’re supposed to hit it, Alex,” Bill explained. He took the baseball bat from Alex, and demonstrated how to swing. “Now you’re turn. One more time.” Again, Bill threw the ball. Again, it plopped at the toes of Alex’s light­up shoes.
Finally with an exasperated sigh, Bill asked aloud, “Is he deaf?” This question was aimed towards Mom.
“Alex, honey,” Mom cooed, “Come to Mommy.” Alex took off in the opposite direction, into the backyard. Mom looked at Bill, as if asking him what to do. Bill shrugged, another way of saying, “he’s not my problem”.
“Let’s take him to the doctor,” Mom decided. “Maybe he’s got an ear infection. Nothing to worry about.” I think this was where Mom left us, already bailing on us in her mind. Possible doctor or hospital bills. Responsibilities. She hadn’t signed up for that.

3
White Labs Coats and Cold Stethoscopes


Alex sat in the back of the car. He got real close to the window, then breathe on the window, and watch as he fogged up the glass. Alex used his small fingers to draw smiles on the window.
I sat next to Alex, silent and worried. I glanced at Alex, who was trailing his finger across the window. His hand spasmed, he scribbled all over his fog drawing so there was nothing left. Alex plopped his hands in his lap and looked down. I continued to stare at him. He didn’t look up at me, which bothered me. I hated that natural feeling you got when someone was staring at you and you could feel their stare on you. Alex’s body was motionless, except for his feet which he kicked back and forth, as if he was trying to pump himself high on a swing.
We rolled into the curved parking lot of the local pediatrics. The car stopped and I heard the click of the parking brake.
We’re here, Alex,” Mom called. She sat in the front of the car alone. Bill stayed at home. Alex stayed planted firmly in his car seat. “Jesus Nell, unbuckle the damn kid,” Mom snarled. The car door opened and slammed as Alex and I and the silence of her leaving remained. My fingers fumbled with the child­proof safety restraint of the car seat. As I reached to pull Alex’s arms out of the straps, he let out a shriek.
“Alex, I’m only helping!” I quickly untangled him from the seat and helped him out of the car. The moment Alex’s feet hit the pavement, he began to shriek again. He flapped his arms against his body. “Shh, shh, Alex,” I tried to coo him. At last, I just picked him up to calm him down.
I walked, Alex in my arms, through the automatic doors that swished open to the waiting 6
room, white and sterile. For a pediatrics office, the room was horribly bland and unfriendly. Mom was arguing, probably about our insurance covering this, with the secretary seated behind the desk. I took Alex into the waiting room, plopping him in the chair next to me. Alex immediately squirmed down from the chair and he dashed to Mom’s side. He tugged relentlessly at her pants. I was familiar with the anger that built in Mom when I used to do that. Next came the shouting. “Off mommy’s leg, Nell!” I remembered the yelling all too well. It was like taunting a bees’ hive and whacking it one too many times.
“Alex, stop hanging on her!” I called. He turned to me and I beckoned him to come back. He saw me waving, but it didn’t seem to register in his head. His tugging on Mom’s pants increased.
“Alex, can’t you see I’m trying to talk! This is grown­up stuff!” You only learn when you get stung. Alex looked confused and hurt. He couldn’t figure out what he did wrong.
A few minutes of waiting passed before a doctor poked his head into the waiting room.
“I’m here to see big boy Alex?” The doctor clicked his pen incessantly. Mixed with Alex, I’m sure Mom was getting a massive migraine. The three of us followed the doctor through a narrow hallway, branching off into room that were just as white and sterile and unhappy as the waiting room.
“My name is Dr. Brandt, by the way,” the doctor called from ahead of us. Dr. Brandt turned suddenly into one of the identical rooms. White paper covered the exam table. It crinkled when we lifted Alex onto it. He liked the crinkling, he squirmed on it. Dr. Brandt pulled a stethoscope from a drawer and draped it around his neck. From that point on, Alex was fixated on the metal chest piece of the stethoscope. His eyes glazed over like he’d found the best thing on earth.
“Now what seems to be the problem?” Dr. Brandt scooted a swivel chair in front of Alex. He kept his chair away from Alex’s feet, which were kicking back and forth excitedly.
“We don’t know. That’s what we’re here to find out,” Mom snapped. I stepped in,
“He’s been unresponsive lately to our voices. He also hasn’t been talking; he makes more sounds than words. We’re just worried he may have an infection or something,” I explained. We talked of Alex as if he wasn’t in the same room. He didn’t notice, so we continued.
“I see. Well, let me do a quick routine check­up.” Dr. Brandt worked in silence. First, he shined a mini flashlight in Alex’s eyes, followed by a temperature check through his ears. Dr. Brandt attempted to check Alex’s throat, but it took a few tries to get Alex to open his mouth for the popsicle stick. The whole time, Alex was staring into space, more specifically the screensaver on Dr. Brandt’s computer. The ball on the screen bounced off the walls and turned different colors.
It wasn’t until Dr. Brandt removed his stethoscope from behind his neck that Alex payed attention. He reached out and tried to grab it from Dr. Brandt. We fought him, but finally got Alex to keep his hands to himself. As soon as the chilled metal touched Alex’s chest, he let out a shriek. He leapt back from the doctor.
Dr. Brandt removed the stethoscope from his ears and turned to us. “I think you should bring Alex in for further testing. I think he may have autism.”






K, now please don't be too harsh on this. It's the beginning and most likely very boring. The good part comes later and it's all in my head at this point. Feel free to tell me what you think.

'Til Death Do Us Die


'Til Death Do Us Die.

Our hands pull away
like the tape that adhere the posters to my wall
old and losings its stick,
we are falling apart
a relationship like ours
was doomed from the start
drowning and being pulled under a wave
drier than a currant
you and i are a paradox
we were
perfect
we were
defect
we’re two pairs of socks
that got separated in the wash
it’s hard for us to get this right
when you’re always going left
life an angle, not angel,
you’re completely obtuse
it’s not cute
I’ve gotten so used to frowning
people think my lips are falling
down for the count
i’m on the ground
1, 2, 3,
i’m loser circle bound
being with you is like playing
the Game of Life
and always losing a turn
and I’ll never get to the end
all i want to do is retire
to my ashy urn
in death, is where true peace can be found
real happiness settles
6 feet under
among the worms and bones
so here we are
holding hands again
but really what it feels like
is my hands folded across my heart
and a smile expertly moulded
upon this face that is merely a shell
that once harboured the soul
that floats above you

Senses of Home


Senses of Home

carmine roses
sniffling noses

teardrops falling
home’s calling

earthy bed
soil fed

bugles sound
underground

farewells said
mourners fled

all alone
turn to bone

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Fire Free

Fire Free


spark is to born
as ash is to bone

fire destroys but beholds
a brighter flame rises
from ended embers
resurrected from binding timbers

purple-red like the setting sun
but dawning in
more brilliant colors

the purple one
bears a crown of thorns
wears it proudly
as it is reborn

burns the innocent virgin flame
but holds a
thousand years’ pain

son of the father
yet father it is
reduce to dust
then return a new sun

babe hidden in death
revealed only
after the smoke clears

the beautiful cry is
of  newborn and
 corpse combined

cinnamon and smoke
cue its exit,
is inhaled upon
the first breath of birth

stoic king,
prince,
immortal

among purples and golds
live within frankincense and myrrh

bred in carnage,
dies in flames of color
and spice and gem

beauty in a blood red pyre
desire in an eternal fire