1. Because I’ll Never Swim In Every Ocean

    Want is ten thousand blue feathers falling
    all around me, and me unable to stomach
    that I might catch five but never ten thousand.
    So I drop my hands to my sides and wait
    to be buried. I open a book and the words
    spring and taunt. Flashes—motel, lapidary,
    piranha—of every story, every poem I’ll never
    know well enough to conjure in sleep.
    What’s the point of words if I can’t
    own them all? I toss book after book
    into my imaginary trashcan fire.
    Or I think I’ll learn piano. At the first lesson,
    we’re clapping whole and half notes
    and this is childish, I’m better than this.
    I’d like to leave playing Ravel. I’d like
    to give a concerto on Saturday. So I quit.
    I have standards. Then on Saturday,
    I have a beer, watch a telethon. Or
    we watch a documentary on Antarctica.
    The interviewees are from Belarus, Lima, Berlin.
    Everyone speaks English. Everyone names
    a philosopher, an ethos. One man carries a raft
    on his back at all times. I went to Nebraska once
    and swore it was a great adventure. It was.
    I think of how I’ll never go to Antarctica,
    mainly because I don’t much want to. But
    I should want to. I should be the girl
    with a raft on her back. When I think
    of all the mountains and monuments
    and skyscapes I haven’t seen, all the trains
    I should take, all the camels and mopeds
    and ferries I should ride, all the scorching
    hikes I should nearly die on, I press
    my body down, down into the vast green
    couch. If I step out the door, the infinity
    of what I’ve missed will zorro me across
    the face with a big L for Lazy. Sometimes
    I watch finches at the feeder, their bodies small
    suns, and have to grab the sill to steady myself.
    Metaphorically, of course, I’m no loon.
    Look—even my awestruck is half-assed.
    But I’m so tired of the small steps—
    the pentatonic scale, the frequent flyer
    hoarding, the one exquisite sentence
    in a forest of exquisite sentences.
    There is a globe welling up inside of me.
    Mountain ranges ridging my skin,
    oceans filling my mouth. If I stay still
    long enough, I could become my own world. 

    by Catherine Pierce from the excellent The Girls of Peculiar

     
  1. johnqduddes reblogged this from alan-hanson
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  3. itsrainingdust reblogged this from jacobwysocki and added:
    by Catherine Pierce from the excellent The Girls of Peculiar.
  4. huffingcreampuff reblogged this from alan-hanson
  5. cucumberrcarrot reblogged this from alan-hanson and added:
    I turned 22 today (in Croatia!) and this makes a world of sense
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  10. sarapolitoislands reblogged this from jacobwysocki and added:
    Want is ten thousand blue feathers falling all around me, and me unable to stomach that I might catch five but never ten...
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  14. jacobwysocki reblogged this from alan-hanson and added:
    Well this is fucking perfect.
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