poetry
You won’t allow me to go to school.
I won’t become a doctor.
Remember this:
One day you will be sick.

— Poem written by an 11 year old Afghan girl 

This poem was recorded in a NYT magazine article about female underground poetry groups in Afghanistan. An amazing article about the ways in which women are using a traditional two line poetry form to express their resistance to male oppression, their feelings about love (considered blasphemous), and their doubts about religion. 

One of the best articles I’ve read all year. Here’s the link

(via katyuno)

There was a young lady of Kent,
Who always said just what she meant;
People said, “She’s a dear -
So unique - so sincere - “
But they shunned her by common consent.
The World’s Best Limericks by the Peter Pauper Press, 1951. (via ingridrichter)

seeingthehorizon:

Performed this at a Slam For Change event earlier this evening.

Lost by seeingthehorizon / Nicolas Kelly

I want to get lost in you,
The same way I get lost in all seven of the Harry Potter Books,
Kinda to the point
Where you lose track of reality.
Where you see it filtering
Through your fingertips
Like a millon grains of sand,
A million little pieces to the puzzle
that never seem to fit.

I want to get lost in you.
I wanna take a couple turns in the wrong direction
Until I don’t know where I am
Because it’s only when you’re lost
that you really start to pay attention
to the little things,
And the little things,
are the most important things,

I want to get lost in you.
I want to whisper
from the depths of my soul
and not be afraid because I know
you’re the only one who understands me.
I want to reach out to the stars,
And I want to feel the stars reaching back,
And I want to know that it’s you
pointng me
in the right direction.

I want to get lost in you.
Lost like I’m in physics class
not knowing what the fuck’s going on
because I’m not thinking about physics,
I’m thinking about you.
And I’m thinking about that smile,
That smile that could
Melt hearts and
Swoon angels.
I’m thinking about the way your eyes light up
when I walk in the room.
I’m thinking about how perfectly you fit in my arms,
Almost like God himself intended it to be that way.

You see, our love is like the air,
Ever present, and surrounding.
Our love is like my pulse,
Invisible to those around me,
But still real because I can feel it.

I want to sleep with you,
Somehow share my dreams with you,
I want to seam our souls together,
So that my dreams come true.
And I,
I want to get lost in you.

the fault in your love is remarkable

I thought of the last four minutes of your life

this morning as I rode to work on the usual

decrepit bus, driven by the usual inane driver.

It briefly struck me as we flew past a mother and

her young (albeit aged) daughter, both in black:

the fault in your love was remarkable.

 

I thought it not in the least bit remarkable

as a pair of teen girls who, for the life

of them could not grasp that the color black

was not as flattering as one might, in usual

context, find it to be. I realized then, and

not too devastatingly so, they short-changed the driver.

 

I tried not to take in to account the driver

and his vulgar demeanor: instead on how remarkable

it was that he and his keen behind-sight cared not and

wanted not to realize that the counting machine came to life,

whirring and whining and missing its usual

fare, as the girls went to the back of the bus, black

 

hips swaying as I recalled how the black

arm of death took you from me. The driver

of a golf cart zoomed past us as we walked our usual

route in the park. You maintained how remarkable

it was that those crazy motorists never cared for a life,

even their own, as you took my arm and

 

lead me away from the paved walk on to a brown and

beaten dust path. It was getting darker, the sky nearly black,

and with a sheer disregard for (like your drivers) my life,

you took now my hand and lead me further from the driver.

I thought briefly the steadiness of your hand remarkable,

but then regarded it as nothing more than the usual––

 

With a screech of tires, we rounded the usual

corner, past the recently robbed Kwik-e Mart and

a couple of homeless chain smokers: remarkable,

I muttered, thinking of course to their black

lungs and yours. One man raised a finger to the driver

as we passed. The last I’d seen since you lost your life.

 

The fault in your life, not less than usual,

the driver behind the reckless car, and

no less black and remarkable.

And as one sees most fearful things
In the crystal of a dream,
We saw the greasy hempen rope
Hooked to the blackened beam,
And heard the prayer the hangman’s snare
Strangled into a scream.
And all the woe that moved him so
That he gave that bitter cry,
And the wild regrets, and the bloody sweats,
None knew so well as I:
For he who lives more lives than one
More deaths that one must die.

The Ballad of Reading Gaol –– Oscar Wilde

I highly suggest you read the whole thing. It’s long, but so so brilliant.

what a____ is writing on the sidewalk tomorrow morning

singwe:

So let me tell you I know there are days it looks like the whole world is dancing in the streets when you break down like the doors of the looted buildings

You are not alone and wondering who will be convicted of the crime of insisting you keep loading your grief into the chamber of your shame

You are not weak just because your heart feels so heavy

Some people will never understand the kind of superpower it takes for some people to just walk outside

Some days I know my smile looks like the gutter of a falling house

But my hands are always holding tight to the ripchord of believing

A life can be rich like the soil

Can make food of decay

Can turn wound into highway

What I know about living is the pain is never just ours

Every time I hurt I know the wound is an echo

I watched a dandelion lose its mind in the wind

and when it did, it scattered a thousand seeds.

let me say right now for the record, I’m still gonna be here

asking this world to dance, even if it keeps stepping on my holy feet

you- you stay here with me, okay?

You stay here with me.

Raising your bright against the bitter dark

Your bright longing

Your brilliant fists of loss

if the only thing we have to gain in staying is each other,

my god that’s plenty

my god that’s enough

my god that is so so much for the light to give

each of us at each other’s backs whispering over and over and over

“Live”

“Live”

“Live”

The Measure of a Man

Not - How did he die? But - How did he live?
Not - What did he gain? But - What did he give?

These are the things that measure the worth
Of a man as a man, regardless of birth.

Not - What was his station? But - had he a heart?
And - How did he play his God-given part?

Was he ever ready with a word of good cheer?
To bring back a smile, to banish a tear?

Not - What was his church? Not - What was his creed?
But - Had he befriended those really in need?

Not - What did the sketch in the newspaper say?
But - How many were sorry when he passed away?

These are the things that measure the worth
Of a man as a man, regardless of birth.