when I called out
you couldn’t hear
I turned to talk
but you weren’t there
you left the works
but took the gear
.
how I wept
how I cried
I sent for a priest
but none arrived
things were rough
the day I died
.
the three great
mysteries life, love and death compass all our little knowledge borne like jewels is of no advantage in the face of the unknown deep in the heart of the sun the sound of tiny hammers beating on golden anvils ring out in a single wavering note they are pounding out our dreams too vague to make sense of and as fleeting as our lives
“Life is for the living.
Death is for the dead.
Let life be like music.
And death a note unsaid.”
― Langston Hughes
They say cats actually purr as death takes them. That seems a healthy attitude to have. Me, I get apprehensive just thinking about my own mortality. I can’t imagine non existence any more than I can imagine some noncorporeal existence, or reincarnation. I can’t even imagine my final moments, but I’m sure I won’t be purring.
.
Don’t dig me up!
I’ve
resigned myself to the inevitable and I just don’t give a fuck. I have heavy
blood. I’m sorry the fighting ended, but glad that the struggle is over. I’m
going to lie here and die by degrees – unnoticed and unloved. My sheets carry
the aroma of soured dreams, and my head is full of snakes.
Why can’t I
just breathe? Open up to the possibility of resurrection? Get myself a shovel and dig. I could leave
this place and never look back. I could start again in a new town, with a new
identity.
The
worst things in life are free, and misery abhors company, but you are never
alone with your memories. I’m a puppet to my memories. I peer dimly
into my empire of dust, and I don’t care – I’m going nowhere – I’m in too deep
now to ever resuscitate.