This is for the band who can't agree on a name.
The girls who sing to their hairbrushes about fame.
The ballers who got no game.
For the money treated all the same.
This is for the hotels with clean sheets.
The dead shrimp you didn't eat.
Songs not on repeat.
Warm socks and cold feet.
The times you got lost in Salt Lake City.
The girls who didn't get called pretty.
And the jokes you thought made you witty.
This is for the movies who got bad reviews.
Your good luck charm that made you lose.
The man who taught you to tie your shoes.
And the colleges that made you choose.
All the words you never said.
The thoughts stuck inside your head.
The pantries who still have bread.
The kids whose parents aren't yet dead.
All the jokes about your mom.
Whoever knows right from wrong.
All the girls with hair that's long.
And the babies who never came along.
The kids who said they didn't care.
The kids that weren't taught not to stare.
The kids who didn't question fair.
The kids who chopped off all their hair.
All the boys with ironed shirts.
The ones who claimed it didn't hurt.
The kids who never hit their growth spurt.
The ones who fell and tasted dirt.
You who wished upon a star.
Who was promised heaven wasn't far.
The hours you spent waiting in your car.
Drinking coffee black as tar.
I'm scared of scars. I'm scared of smoke.
I'm scared you think it's just a joke.
I'm scared your dick will make me choke.
I'm scared of lips. I'm scared of mouths.
I'm scared of north east west and south.
I'm scared this home is just a house.
Take me back to the age when you still thought snow had flavor.
Take me back to the days that I didn't savor.
This is for the Mrs. who thinks her hubby's still at work.
The girls who try and fail to twerk.
The boy who said he liked your quirks.
Your ex you swear is such a jerk.
For the kids who eat lunch all alone.
Whoever's dog is gnawing on your bones.
The bullying no one condones.
The prom dress your mother's sewn.
The plastic surgery you thought you needed.
How many tries it took til you succeeded.
The warnings you heard but never heeded.
The texts you wish you had deleted.
For the first kisses gone to shit.
The people who never sit.
Homeruns you didn't hit.
And the baseball players that can't spit.
This is for you.
The trauma said, “Don’t write this poem. Nobody wants to hear you cry about the grief inside your bones.” But my bones said, “Tyler Clementi dove into the Hudson River convinced he was entirely alone.” My bones said, “Write the poem.” -Andrea Gibson
Monday, April 28, 2014
Saturday, April 19, 2014
I'm not at prom.
I'm as broken as your promises and the empty light filtering through the glass.
I was the third from the left and they wouldn't stop laughing at my haircut.
The rain wore me out just like your tears.
We wanted to sit more than we wanted arms.
Forgotten like Grandma's old dishes and the Christmas decorations in spring.
Friday, April 18, 2014
The Alphabet (idea stolen from Alis Priddy)
A is for the abuse you reported. A is for abuse gone unreported.
B is for Botox and the fountain of youth. Every time your little sister called you "Bitch" and you believed her.
C is for cleavage and the little you've got.
D is for depression, the disease that's taking over the nation one teenager at a time. One case of the baby blues every couple of seconds. One chronic illness. One death in the family. One "life was easier when I was a kid." The disease that's taking over the commercials on TV with promises that Cymbalta can help and that's taking over your life in the form of a new therapist every week.
E is for espresso. To make up for energy and the joke that's become.
F is for forgiveness. F is for forgiving your ex seven times seven. F is for faith and the saint you're becoming.
G is for gay. We don't know how to handle them. We like their YouTube channels and their Facebook statuses, yet we're scared of gay marriage.
H is for high and however we get there.
I is for innocence and the loss thereof.
J is for jail. We rap about killing our wives. Abusing our girlfriends. Drug deals. Gang fights. We worship the homeboys and their image, but throw the real gangstas in jail.
K is for kissing kicking knives knowledge knitting hats.
L is for lies. The world is processed through Photoshop and I can't tell what's real and what's not.
M is for the media and how it dictates our lives more than the Bible. M is for makeup that we wear like masks. M is for money and marriage and milk.
N is for naked. And how that's all we are and all we're not.
O is for oppression.
P is for the bottles of pills in the lockbox ever since you overdosed. P is for the pills you're prescribed and the pills you pop anyways.
Q is for the questions your parents ask, but you don't answer.
R is for rehab and for all of your treatment buddies and their nonstop posts on Facebook.
S is for sex. S is for STD's and who has what. And did you know you can get an STD giving a blowjob? S is for skinny and how that's all girls aspire to be anymore.
T is for texting pictures of your tits.
U is for uninvited to that party. U is for unasked to prom.
V is for vintage and the filters on insta.
W is for writing to stop from punching another hole in the wall. W is for writing to take the pain away. W is for writing instead of taking drugs.
X is for xenophobia and how I'm scared of strangers but I should be scared of myself instead.
Y is for you and how that's all I seem to think about anymore.
Z is for zero and that's how many of us can honestly say we love ourselves.
B is for Botox and the fountain of youth. Every time your little sister called you "Bitch" and you believed her.
C is for cleavage and the little you've got.
D is for depression, the disease that's taking over the nation one teenager at a time. One case of the baby blues every couple of seconds. One chronic illness. One death in the family. One "life was easier when I was a kid." The disease that's taking over the commercials on TV with promises that Cymbalta can help and that's taking over your life in the form of a new therapist every week.
E is for espresso. To make up for energy and the joke that's become.
F is for forgiveness. F is for forgiving your ex seven times seven. F is for faith and the saint you're becoming.
G is for gay. We don't know how to handle them. We like their YouTube channels and their Facebook statuses, yet we're scared of gay marriage.
H is for high and however we get there.
I is for innocence and the loss thereof.
J is for jail. We rap about killing our wives. Abusing our girlfriends. Drug deals. Gang fights. We worship the homeboys and their image, but throw the real gangstas in jail.
K is for kissing kicking knives knowledge knitting hats.
L is for lies. The world is processed through Photoshop and I can't tell what's real and what's not.
M is for the media and how it dictates our lives more than the Bible. M is for makeup that we wear like masks. M is for money and marriage and milk.
N is for naked. And how that's all we are and all we're not.
O is for oppression.
P is for the bottles of pills in the lockbox ever since you overdosed. P is for the pills you're prescribed and the pills you pop anyways.
Q is for the questions your parents ask, but you don't answer.
R is for rehab and for all of your treatment buddies and their nonstop posts on Facebook.
S is for sex. S is for STD's and who has what. And did you know you can get an STD giving a blowjob? S is for skinny and how that's all girls aspire to be anymore.
T is for texting pictures of your tits.
U is for uninvited to that party. U is for unasked to prom.
V is for vintage and the filters on insta.
W is for writing to stop from punching another hole in the wall. W is for writing to take the pain away. W is for writing instead of taking drugs.
X is for xenophobia and how I'm scared of strangers but I should be scared of myself instead.
Y is for you and how that's all I seem to think about anymore.
Z is for zero and that's how many of us can honestly say we love ourselves.
Sunday, April 6, 2014
Writing to Save Yourself
Saturday night, I got in a fight with my parents. The screaming match was more than I could handle and memories memories memories were pushing to the forefront of my eyelids. I slipped into my room and quickly realized the futility of tears, so I dug under the pile of clothes that had become a carpet of their own. And I found my wallet. And I left.
I still don't know why I took my wallet.
True to form, they hid the car keys before I had a chance to take them. I walked for a directionless hour along SR-92 headed west. And I was sobbing walking along the curb. Not one car stopped. Not even the ones screaming music from inside the rolled up windows. I laughed. Why did I think cars would stop for a teenager walking alone in the dark? I'm no celebrity.
My shirt was thin, and my hands were cold. And I called but you didn't answer. You didn't call back. You were probably making out with your girlfriend. I just wanted to ask if you could drop off a sweatshirt, preferably with some pockets. Or ask if you could help me find a way to sneak into the church because I hate asking to spend the night.
The headlights were starting to make me self-conscious.
And I thought about how I should have taken a shower before I started this pilgrimage because my hair was sticking up weird.
I laughed because teenagers think they are significant.
But that only made me cry harder.
And I know you can't freeze to death in forty degree weather. But if the grass is wet, and your sleeves are short, you just might.
And I know that you will never know what it is like to have the police called to your own house to assess property damage from punching a hole in your own wall.
Or what it is like to have the police call your cell phone.
And I know, I know. The breakthrough is finding about that connection that's more than brushing fingertips. The breakthrough is reading a raw, bitter post about love when you're feeling raw and bitter yourself. That breakthrough is writing about your sloppy first kiss and getting ten comments about your peers' sloppy first kisses. Writing about LDS general conference that I did not watch. Writing about praying and disappointing two sets of parents.
But sometimes writing is about talking to the computer screen so you don't punch another hole in the wall.
See I want to punch another hole in the wall, but I wrote this instead. Now I'm jogging instead of sprinting. Now my fingers are moving a little faster than when they look for channels on the telly. Now my breaths are a little less jagged and sharp. The music of my heartbeat is a little more soft and a little more even. Like the intro of a ballad.
I didn't write this for you. I wrote this for my heart. She needed a little breathing room and space to talk.
I still don't know why I took my wallet.
True to form, they hid the car keys before I had a chance to take them. I walked for a directionless hour along SR-92 headed west. And I was sobbing walking along the curb. Not one car stopped. Not even the ones screaming music from inside the rolled up windows. I laughed. Why did I think cars would stop for a teenager walking alone in the dark? I'm no celebrity.
My shirt was thin, and my hands were cold. And I called but you didn't answer. You didn't call back. You were probably making out with your girlfriend. I just wanted to ask if you could drop off a sweatshirt, preferably with some pockets. Or ask if you could help me find a way to sneak into the church because I hate asking to spend the night.
The headlights were starting to make me self-conscious.
And I thought about how I should have taken a shower before I started this pilgrimage because my hair was sticking up weird.
I laughed because teenagers think they are significant.
But that only made me cry harder.
And I know you can't freeze to death in forty degree weather. But if the grass is wet, and your sleeves are short, you just might.
And I know that you will never know what it is like to have the police called to your own house to assess property damage from punching a hole in your own wall.
Or what it is like to have the police call your cell phone.
And I know, I know. The breakthrough is finding about that connection that's more than brushing fingertips. The breakthrough is reading a raw, bitter post about love when you're feeling raw and bitter yourself. That breakthrough is writing about your sloppy first kiss and getting ten comments about your peers' sloppy first kisses. Writing about LDS general conference that I did not watch. Writing about praying and disappointing two sets of parents.
But sometimes writing is about talking to the computer screen so you don't punch another hole in the wall.
See I want to punch another hole in the wall, but I wrote this instead. Now I'm jogging instead of sprinting. Now my fingers are moving a little faster than when they look for channels on the telly. Now my breaths are a little less jagged and sharp. The music of my heartbeat is a little more soft and a little more even. Like the intro of a ballad.
I didn't write this for you. I wrote this for my heart. She needed a little breathing room and space to talk.
Saturday, April 5, 2014
And God laughed.
I say sorry again and again, but it's a word now rendered meaningless to my family due to the accompanying lack of results.
And you can't be "good" at a diet, because that's called an eating disorder... and he's a monkey you can't get off your back.
And we shoot bb's at the moon to spite God and God laughs.
God laughed when I got mono from kissing that night I sneaked out and wasn't supposed to.
He laughed when all of Utah county pretended to be Buddhist for a day just to attend a chalk festival. And on his list of regrets is a missed opportunity to create a chalk festival to celebrate Christ's birth.
God laughs at karma.
When you punched the wall and broke your hand.
When that chick shaved her head. He got the joke.
God laughed when you bought pet mice for $3 apiece when you could catch them in the field across the street for free.
And he cried when my sister asked me to rate my love for her on a scale from one to five, and I said two. Even though it was a joke. It was a terrible joke.
God cried when he watched "The Boy in the Striped Pajamas," but he ridicules "The Titanic."
He turned his back from the Holocaust. Notice I said "from" instead of "on." He did not turn his back on their suffering. He did not turn away because he is an apathetic God. But because he had to stop himself from ending the world right then and there.
He cries when the teenage moms abandon their babies at the park, wrapped in swaddling clothes. Because no matter how many babes he sees, they always remind him of one nearly two thousand years ago with all their potential.
He cried when the girl who hadn't been raped lied about being raped and when the girl who had lied and said she hadn't.
The room had a sink.
The sink was for washing.
The sink was white.
He spends half his time at the sink washing the ugly off of his hands.
Thursday, April 3, 2014
So maybe I should start doing the prompts.
P.S.
Jewel
I wrote those nice poems
only because
the honest ones
would frighten you.
It's short and sweet. Sometimes I feel like I have to write these long posts in order to get my points across but she does it all in only a sentence.
I love how the title ties in the poem. The title makes it sound like it should be an afterthought. The substance of the poem coupled with the title sounds like a confession that she was too scared to admit at the beginning of a conversation or in the opening paragraph of a letter, but words that should have been said up front. Like when there's an elephant in the room the whole time you're visiting your parents, and when you are opening the door to leave, you say: "P.S. I eloped with my boyfriend from France. The one that you didn't like. And we had a nice little wedding in Vegas and now I'm pregnant."
It brings up the topic of honest vs. dark. Honest vs. positive. Are these concepts exclusive or inclusive? Can a poem be positive withoutignoring the parts that are hard? Or is a truly positive poem coming to peace with the dark and incorporating both aspects of life? Does a nice poem lack substance?
This poem really felt like it was saying all the things that I didn't know how to put into a sentence. When I started my blog, my mom started reading it and she didn't like it. She was impressed that I could write, but she said, "Honey, why don't you write about happy things? Why don't you write about nice things? Why are you dwelling on the negative?"
But sometimes counting the positives on your fingers when you're drowning isn't practical. And you need to address the fact that you're drowning. And sometimes when you get pulled out of the water, you want to talk about it instead of pretending that it didn't happen. Writing about the beauty of the ocean when you're scared to death of getting in the water isn't honest. But it's nice.
Jewel
I wrote those nice poems
only because
the honest ones
would frighten you.
It's short and sweet. Sometimes I feel like I have to write these long posts in order to get my points across but she does it all in only a sentence.
I love how the title ties in the poem. The title makes it sound like it should be an afterthought. The substance of the poem coupled with the title sounds like a confession that she was too scared to admit at the beginning of a conversation or in the opening paragraph of a letter, but words that should have been said up front. Like when there's an elephant in the room the whole time you're visiting your parents, and when you are opening the door to leave, you say: "P.S. I eloped with my boyfriend from France. The one that you didn't like. And we had a nice little wedding in Vegas and now I'm pregnant."
It brings up the topic of honest vs. dark. Honest vs. positive. Are these concepts exclusive or inclusive? Can a poem be positive without
This poem really felt like it was saying all the things that I didn't know how to put into a sentence. When I started my blog, my mom started reading it and she didn't like it. She was impressed that I could write, but she said, "Honey, why don't you write about happy things? Why don't you write about nice things? Why are you dwelling on the negative?"
But sometimes counting the positives on your fingers when you're drowning isn't practical. And you need to address the fact that you're drowning. And sometimes when you get pulled out of the water, you want to talk about it instead of pretending that it didn't happen. Writing about the beauty of the ocean when you're scared to death of getting in the water isn't honest. But it's nice.
Pickup Lines with Promised Results!
- Your ass is round. Like the moon.
- You can't buy melons like those at the store.
- Your hands are soft.
- Shit. Your nose. Is. Lovely.
- You look like that girl in that movie that no one watched.
- Let's kiss under a lamp post so people can watch us take our clothes off.
- Your eyebrows are real nice.
- Do you want me to blow up a ball of air and tie it to a string so you can carry it around?
- I wanna taste your saliva.
- Why don't fish walk in schools? Because they swim in schools! (and other Laffy Taffy jokes)
- I know how to swear in five languages.
- If you go out with me, I won't even make you shave your legs.
- I left my thong in your car for you to remember me by.
- Your lips look like a black person's.
- I named my stuffed animal after you. I sleep with it every night.
- I've been working out my tongue specifically for a time like this.
- I don't know a lot about kissing, but what I do know is to use your teeth.
- Your skin is paler than a skin color crayon. I would have to use a white crayon if I was drawing you.
- I would have to use an orange crayon on you, sweetheart, because of how often you spray tan.
- Your sense of humor is like my mom's.
- Native Americans have seventeen words for coitus and the word "Utah" is one of them.
You're beautiful. *Slap.
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