sleepy kitty
on the floor
snoring cutely
by the door
Author: Georgia Tell
Poem #638
pastel rainbow sky
purple mountains
a morning drive
Poem #637
dogs barking like mad outside
cats inside calm as can be
iguana skittish and caged
girl tapping the floor — content
Poem #636
spaghetti and meatballs
playing with the cat
wrestling on the couch
falling to the floor
laughing very loudly
let’s do this some more
Poem #635
kissing in museums
kicking it merrily
kissing in markets
keeping it magic
Poem #634
woman in love with her two month boyfriend
little boy says he’ll marry this girl one day
girl goes to her girlfriend’s house 5 nights a week
man closing the restaurant three dates in a row
“love is in the air,” says the writer
Poem #633
she will disappear soon
barely the air she breathes
lighter than a whisper
and she still won’t be happy
Poem #632
big gentle face
round brown eyes
melancholy look
giant snuggles
crushing girl
with enormous love
Poem #631
free child
smile without thought
dream without limit
Poem in Invisible Ink
The words are aching to explode from my chest. Instead, they leak in invisible ink. I want to read them, but I can’t see them, even with glasses.
I write this while I sit on a full-sized bed in a small room with nearly thirty other beings. The only way I survive is focus, focus on other things. I am a master of focus. Focus. Focus. Focus.
But that focus can create this never-ending loop in my brain. An anxiety loop worsening until my bones are about to shatter from the shaking. More power than a jack hammer. More oscillation than a “back massager.” More danger than an earthquake.
I’M LIABLE TO EXPLODE!
… except quietly. Softly. No one will notice that my heart seized up in the frenzy. No one will notice as I fall to the ground.
I am as invisible as the words I cannot put to paper. I am a writer who cannot write. I am a poet who barely uses adverbs.
Even this is short, though I can feel the rhythm of those superfluous words in my chest. They waltz. They are beautiful, I am aware. But I can’t see them.