âDefine loneliness? Yes. Itâs what we canât do for each other.â
â Claudia Rankine, from Donât Let Me Be Lonely: An American Lyric (Graywolf Press, 2004)
One Nice Bug Per Day
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YOU ARE THE REASON

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@cultprodigy
âDefine loneliness? Yes. Itâs what we canât do for each other.â
â Claudia Rankine, from Donât Let Me Be Lonely: An American Lyric (Graywolf Press, 2004)
Sarah Patterson in The Company of Wolves (1984) by Neil Jordan
AT THE MOMENT, YOU WANT�
TO UNDERSTAND.
you feel as if you cannot understand. your heart desires to do so, but everything seems useless, or maybe like you've exhausted every possible option. you've probably tried hard, looking low and high. opening every cabinet in the house, searching every drawer, looking under every bed. you might've ripped apart whole rooms looking, searching for exactly what you need. maybe you feel you've run out of places to look, things to find, people to ask. the windshield is frosted over, and you're sitting in the car, waiting for it to melt on a cold, winter morning. it feels as if itll never defrost, impossible to see through, no matter how much heat there is. be patient. keep searching. you'll understand eventually, i promise.
TAGGED BY: @transforms
TAGGING: you
transformsâ.
a nod, nearly as fleeting â she watches them with wide, dark eyes, ever unsure when to speak ( never wanting to cut in, should eden choose to elaborate ), but calm, content. itâs a rhythm sheâs been caught in long enough to improvise. i think itâs nice. i think itâs you. the corners of bonnieâs mouth twitch upward, but canât settle into smiling ( sheâs never comfortable with compliments, even if she has earned them ).Â
â alright. â they know she could use the fresh air on a good day, and she wonders when that happened. when she was a kid â when they were kids, in the summers out at fayeâs â they forgot to come in till dark, more often than not, always doing something. â you want a sweater? â
  edenâs eager to grasp at the day before they get so sick they canât enjoy it anymore. the headacheâs there, the fogginess, the ache behind their eyes and at the back of their skull. they want to sit in the sun and have a cigarette before the sunâs so bright they canât bear to keep the curtains open. itâll be good for the both of them, and itâs one of the few nice moments theyâll have together before eden drinks themself into a coma or hops on the next train back to the city.
â sure, â theyâve probably got one, but they lift their shoulders up and shrug anyway, letting bonnie take care of it. them. just this once.  â iâll meet you out there. â
phlegmagicsâ.
   â   iâm tired.    â  thatâs all they say as their body slumps down into an available chair.  words like that arenât too rare to fall from their lips.  anything can make eyelids heavy and muscles relax.   â   i got a full eight hours !    â      @cultprodigy.   st.
  â Then sleep a little more. â They look just the same, sat low in their chair with their chin tucked against their chest. Never really seems to make a difference, does it? Asleep here, awake somewhere else. They sigh, or groan, or make some noise thatâs somewhere in between.  â You could take something. â
sterrupsâ.
     This is the end of the fourth match in a row and Hank is feeling bruised. âMaybe you moved âem when I took a leak,â he says and itâs clear he doesnât believe himself any more than they would. Proud men and sore losers, these plainsfolk. Hankâs eyes track the piece as Eden resigns it from the game, then he sighs and lifts his hat from his head to give it a good scratch. âWho taught you?â
  â My dad, â they lift their shoulders up into a shrug, beginning to line up his dead pieces in a neat row. It didnât really go down like that, because Edenâs learning process is more aptly described as remembering a skill they possessed three lives ago, than learning anything new. Eden stretches out, cracking their joints. Theyâve been sitting in one place for a long time, their legs crossed in their chair; they roll their ankles to loosen them up. â You wanna go again, or are you just gonna get grumpier each time? â
My dad was eating pistachios so I reached my hand out and he just started peeling them and giving them to me. Then suddenly went "I really hope you find someone who loves you a lot" and I went "enough to peel my pistachios for me?" And he laughed and said "yeah exactly" before carrying on giving me more
My wound existed before me; I was born to embody it.
Joë Bousquet (via memoryslandscape)
sterrupsâ.
âYou would say that now youâve lost.
     âYouâre damn right, I would.â Hank leans over the chess board in utter despair. Heâs not a smart fella, he knows that much, but heâs thought himself to be a decent opponent in any game of chess. âI know youâre cheatinâ,â he insists, though their victory is written plain and fair before him.
@cultprodigy - ALAN PARTRIDGE: ALPHA PARTRIDGE - accepting
  â Be honest, â they start, taking his king off the board and putting it behind their queen, in the graveyard with almost all of his other pieces. Thereâs no real point to it outside some small, arrogant show of conquest. A toothy little grin lights up their face,  â how would someone cheat at this game? â
grave (2016) dir. julia ducournau
frank oâhara sentence starters. from assorted poems.
âit seems they were all cheated of some marvelous experience.â
âi want to be wanted more than anything else in the world.â
âi was trotting along and suddenly it started raining.â
âi have been to lots of parties and acted perfectly disgraceful.â
âhave you forgotten what we were like then?â
âyou really are beautiful!â
âeveryone will want to go to bed with you.â
âhey! iâve been trying to wake you up for fifteen minutes.â
âin a world where you are possible, my love, nothing can go wrong for us.â
âeach time my heart is broken it makes me feel more adventurous.â
âi am the least difficult of [men], all i want is boundless love.â
âhow am i to become a legend, my dear?â
ânow i am quietly waiting for the catastrophe of my personality to seem beautiful again.â
âthatâs what we love about art, it seems to prefer us and stays.â
âwhat is more beautiful than night?â
âi wanna stay drunk for many days.â
âafter the first glass of vodka you can accept just about anything of life.â
âthe elements of disbelief are very strong in the morning.â
âi think youâre wonderful and so does everyone else.â
âa lot of people in this room wish they were you.â
âyour walk has a musical quality.â
âwho do you think you are, anyway?â
âi realize youâve lived in france, but that doesnât mean you know everything.â
âan invitation to lunch, how do you like that?â
âi guess you are the hero of this day.â
âhowever exaggerated at least somethingâs going on.â
alexandra G.
transformsâ.
â thereâs gin, â bonnie offers, â upstairs. â  she wonât pretend she knows the half of â whatever happens with the visions, but thereâs nothing to be gained from feigned ignorance. â i shouldnât, anyway. â  shouldnât, but maybe-definitely nowâs a bad time for much sobriety, and it was wise of tegan to bring it.
iâve always liked your house.Â
â thanks, â almost shyly, smiling behind the mug in her hands, â guess i am kinda proud. â  itâs not something sheâs thought about â or even had time to think about, in the two years since she bought it â but bonnie loves the space, loves the area, loves making it more and more hers. â you donât think itâs too much? âÂ
â no, â a faint smile, more with their eyes than their mouth. no, itâs not too much. no, iâm fine without putting gin in my coffee. they donât seem too taken aback being called out, but thereâs a swell of shame, somewhere; ugly and deep. they could do with an aspirin, or something stronger, but they usually do okay without. Â
â i think itâs nice. â even the butterflies. maybe even especially.  â i think itâs you. â
their mind drifts, briefly, wondering what the doctors have bonnie taking, but they glance away to drink their coffee as if thatâll do anything at all to quiet their mind.
â itâs early. do you want to sit outside? iâll have a smoke. â
wavebraekâ.
he thinks about it for a long moment, swirling the ice around his glass. itâs all uncertain for a while. this place and their voice and the room around him, transient and unwelcoming, like the walls might melt into nothing and beyond it will only be a void. a long, bright dark.Â
     âa big one. yâknow. my dad always said a dog isnât a dog unless itâs half your body weight.âÂ
  â sure. â they get it.  â i had a dobermann as a kid. â
they watch the ice in his glass, the condensation creeping down the sides, pooling on the old wooden table to make a ring to match all the others. somewhere overhead, a light flickers. they wonder if itâs not their brain playing tricks on them, some twisted joke about common migraine triggers, telling them to order something more useful than cheap beer.
â bigger than me âtil i was about six. â
chelseahotelsâ:
@cultprodigy | roulette starter
    printing has taken an hour. calvinâs just woken up from a long nap on the windowsill, though it wasnât a very restful one â her neck is cramped and thereâs a line of dried drool on her chin. edenâs process is a strange one, they seem to creep around like one of the characters in those stories they write. the pamphlets are of good use to cal, though, and their collaboration may prove to be a fruitful one. she maneuvers her way off the window sill and around the desk; eden doesnât seem to notice. nothing alters their expression, nothing draws their gaze.
    âhey,â  she yawns, âhave you been smoking grass in here?â
   the first draft of whatever edenâs writing is a mess --- half-written sentences trailing off mid-thought, scribbles in the margins of the notepad, symbols in languages no one else remembers how to speak.
they lift their head, bleary eyed, a little bloodshot. â why, â itâs half tobacco, and might cost cal her security deposit if it hangs around in the carpet. they would have opened the window, if she wasnât pressed up against it. â do you want some? â
wavebraekâ.
@cultprodigyâ / logan.
   âmeet me, king jesus, meet me.â   he hums it under his breath and thinks of what comes next. wonât you meet me in the middle of the air? something like that. his knee bounces so hard itâs starting to rattle the cartilage and hurt his heel, but the whiskey sour isnât doing enough to calm him down; thereâs that bad feeling again. the dread creeping up his spine.Â
      ââ iâve been thinking about getting a dog.â
   â maybe you should. â
   itâs always too hard to tell which end theyâre on; if the migraineâs in its infancy or if theyâre just now getting over it, but it always seems to be one of the two. they rest their cheek on their hand and watch him through low-lidded eyes, looking tired and hungover. edenâs three beers in and struggling to feel any of them, the bottles set up in a neat little line at their elbow.
   â a big one or a small one? â
transformsâ.
Oh, you know. She knows plenty. Itâs the kind of non-response she hates â Bonnieâs not in the habit of asking questions she doesnât want answers to â but because itâs Eden, specifically, and perhaps because sheâs only getting her second cup of coffee, she lets it slide.Â
â Did it last night, â she says, â unless youâre trying to tell me something. In which case, itâs too early, and I donât care. â
   they pour a mug for both of them, edenâs without the early morning hit of whiskey theyâre used to. it helps, theyâll say, but when your nerve endings are always prickling under your skin, any concession helps. they think theyâll leave in the afternoon; spare bonnie the worst of it.
â iâm not trying to tell you anything, â neutral expression, neutral tone. they shrug lightly, tucking a curl behind their ear.  â iâve always liked your house. have i ever told you that? â