The Man Who Lost Hisafter seemed same, like bright to freshly closed eyelids then shock bloomed cold a glacier that crept up and hugged him from behind he saw absence through the forozen transparent the feel and the think parts were safely iced up numb, though the warm red hurt melted through the center eventually and sparked gently on the backs of his eyes throbbing, burning, forcing tears out hot to the surface where they thawed out a path to a high spot where he could really see the lack of the greedy echo empty sucked all the scream out then delightedly spooned out laughter, a tasty hysteric until it had licked him clean he could see from where he was that it was still empty, ravenous although the bones of multitudes lay piled at its feet and a line of his fellows stretched behind him out of sight, but only he was high enough to see the truth the skeletons told him agitatedly they understood, byut the formulaic cyphers they clicked off he yelled you comprehend nothing, I see all I am the king of the top of the fall I am distinct, you have forgotten the queue behind was ignorant he felt guilt, it was stupid to let anything take his stupid, stupid, stupid the moment when his hair caught fire he lost his too the flesh ran off he weakly clacked into the calcium heap had no sense but phantom pain where his used to be he looked all the way up to the highest depths saw himself in the person stretched out being picked clean chattered a late warning.-- WinterThe heat of the sun makes her
The Siren{ed. note from author:}
Untitled poem, August 1981You think I'm so innocent, pure, and free The Doors of Perception{December 1985} The doors of perception are stel, with razor-sharp edges. They are at the corners of the deserts of your mind, and the transient winds of your emotions are causing them to swing wildly, erratically, back and forth... The moments at which we step outside of ourselves and go through these doors are very rare, and very unpredictable. Who knows whether, at the moment you step up to those doors, they will be swung open, allowing you to see clearly at last, or slamming shut, killing you, and, worse, slashing apart your imagination, killing you, and, worse, slashing apart your imagination, savagely, brutally. These doors are the keys to all that is real (which is hardly anything in this world). It is only when we go through them that we get a glimpse of the true, horrible, beautiful Self within us all. Only the unlucky make it back through those doors to the hellish world that the rest of us are, for the present, cursed to live in. MIRRORGLASS{Journal fiction, December 1988, age 18}
REFLECTIONS ON PRESENT, PAST AND FUTURE{ed.note from author}
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The Man Who Lost His
Winter The Siren Untitled poem, August 1981 The Doors of Perception MIRRORGLASS REFLECTIONS ON PRESENT, PAST AND FUTURE botched haiku, 16yrs Free-writing exercise: 12th grade Diary entry, 3/24/94
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