there are worse things than being alone.
By Six-Out
sometimes I sit outside with
a glass of red wine
and a cigar.
that's when life makes sense.
and I think of
when you asked me about god
and my only reply was
'god doesn't exist
simply because we want him to
so badly'.
and you looked at me
as if I had lost my mind.
and I drank my wine then.
took a drag from the cohiba
and thought about
that
for just a minute.
and came to the conclusion
that you just
had yet to find yours.
so I take a sip, now.
and remember when the beach
was the end of the world.
and that sand felt like
the beginning
of something much, much
bigger
than ourselves.
back then, before the waves
lost their touch as
messengers of the wind.
and we could count clouds
on a clear day
pretending each was a wish.
from someone else like me.
just blowing the smoke
from their lungs.
and trying to write-
an afterlife.
this was. when the stars
still stood on pedestals
watching me
swallow down that opaque red.
and I felt like god
was a manifestation of my own
shallow, inebriation.
before the shirts were stained
from tears- when death
made itself so abundantly
clear.
and I had no fear of
immortality. then, the world made
sense. and I
-I felt like breaking down poetry
in the name of
being alive.
drinking from this glass.
I still feel the ocean.
and hope I never wake up
alone
in this perception.
because, death doesn't always
come in the form
of a casket and a
gravestone.
and dried up ink. is something
like a blood clot.
I still wish on honduran leaves
and columbian ashes.
only now- it's something more like
counting to ten
and hoping my past forgets
what it's looking for.
letters are for the pretentious.
I remember you told me
when I said
I wanted to share my nostalgia
with you in the form
of old notebook paper
and coffee stains
on the corners.
if only you knew.
Comments on "there are worse things than being alone."
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A former member wrote:
will always be one of my favorites
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On Sunday, July 29, 2012, RibbonHeart
(22) wrote:
We are never alone as long as we have our memories. Thank you for writing this, it is truly wonderful. x
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On Friday, March 16, 2012, dumbone
(62) wrote:
nice work... I really enjoyed this...
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On Tuesday, March 1, 2011, MyScarletLetter
(6) wrote:
"death doesn't always come in the form of a casket and a gravestone." I got chills reading this....how very very very true! Thank you for this wonderful work. :)
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A former member wrote:
I'd just say PERFECT!
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On Wednesday, July 28, 2010, cre
(410) wrote:
Goodness. I have missed out, throughout these years, missing your words. Very nice.
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On Friday, May 7, 2010, liquid_emotion
(323) wrote:
Some say that aching, longing which can only be fulfulled in short spurts, is a signpost. Like so many others that tell us we were not made for this world and silently whisper there is something more.
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A former member wrote:
*hats off to you sir* I hope to one day be able to write as beautifully and emotionally as you.
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A former member wrote:
*pointing @ u* u my friend are good...so very good...no actually great is better suited
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A former member wrote:
The description death was so bitterly honest. i loved this piece.
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On Saturday, June 13, 2009, Savannah
(218) wrote:
You need to hurry and come visit, sweetheart. I hate when you're sad :'(
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A former member wrote:
I want to tattoo this on my forehead and hope that SOMEONE will come along and feel this with me.
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On Thursday, June 4, 2009, lovechild
(43) wrote:
no. i don't want to know this feeling but as i have seen and done and FELT so much the same way, all I can say is that I am going to pretend I can't understand, I have no idea what you are trying to convey, and when I come back to reality I am going to click on your works and see some sparkly trinkets of poignant prose or some groovy text-riffs and re-mastered nostalgias...right? okay here I go, off into denial BRB
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A former member wrote:
...i want conversations jsut like this....after midnights; slow and smooth lie bourbon. . .. . gawds.
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A former member wrote:
Fuck you for being so talented.
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On Tuesday, June 2, 2009, Malice In Wonderland
(976) wrote:
I'm so glad I read this....and, agreed, there are things MUCH worse...
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On Tuesday, June 2, 2009, Blood Saga
(78) wrote:
I love the description in this poem. It reminds me of a famous poem I once read, I can't remember it though. Or maybe that's just because this seems like it might be a famous poem someday.
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A former member wrote:
:)
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On Tuesday, June 2, 2009, Mylissa
(825) wrote:
so...i like this. :}
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On Tuesday, June 2, 2009, CharlottesWeb
(509) wrote:
funny...thats where my mind went too.
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A former member wrote:
I couldn't help but picture you on the beach in your orange shirt :)
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On Sunday, August 16, 2009, Six-Out
(1423) wrote:
Sadly, that shirt is no more. :(
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On Tuesday, June 2, 2009, ALBATROSS
(194) wrote:
This flows so elegantly. This is such a nice little snapshot of time where through relaxation and bliss one comes across epiphanies whether truly realizing what is or just realizing what is not - Sometimes the epiphany lies within the apathy of the escape. But in all cases, I think that it makes you come to terms with yourself and existence in a peaceful way. And I think that you captured a piece of this in your writing. (For me at least, It served as a reminder of this feeling) Thank you for gracing me with this poem, It's always a treat to run across these types of poems that warm my heart like wine and smoke. Beautiful.
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On Tuesday, June 2, 2009, sanglante
(16) wrote:
so reflective and honest, beautiful.
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A former member wrote:
I like how the pace of this develops with the scene; the tone unravels with the words, thoughtful, slow, like sun- draped palms in a gulf breeze. Smooth as wine and cohiba.
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On Tuesday, June 2, 2009, Sketso
(416) wrote:
'god doesn't exist simply because we want him to so badly' - such an open-ended line... and what a write. So much to think about, and covered casually in a couple of moments. Talk about your introspective nostalgia! And I'll say this... often, irregular grammar, like random periods here and there, is an irritant to me (my own fault) and ruins a work due to my own pet peeves, but this flowed so naturally, though the breaks were noticed, it didn't matter. I was sucked through to the end, where I settled in with a grin of companionship and a moment of silence... rambling comment, I know, but in this, I was compelled. Well done.