wanting and needing and yearning and longing and desiring and pining and craving btw. if u even care

Kaledo Art
wallacepolsom
Xuebing Du
$LAYYYTER
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
hello vonnie
Sade Olutola

Andulka

shark vs the universe
occasionally subtle
trying on a metaphor
Show & Tell
we're not kids anymore.

Kiana Khansmith

blake kathryn

No title available

oozey mess

@theartofmadeline
almost home

Janaina Medeiros
seen from Argentina

seen from United States
seen from France
seen from Brazil
seen from Guadeloupe
seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from Türkiye

seen from Japan
seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Chile

seen from Brazil

seen from Venezuela
@lovesick-skies
wanting and needing and yearning and longing and desiring and pining and craving btw. if u even care
“Just because something doesn’t last forever, doesn’t mean it wasn’t meaningful while it did last.”
— Candace Bushnell
Alejandro Zambra, Ways of Going Home (translated by Megan McDowell)
Virginia Woolf, from a letter to Violet Dickinson written c. June 1907
Strawberry Moon l seongmo.le
going in search of fireflies again don't wait up
found theeeem
KittyValleyRanch
Scorpio ~ You were once loved in a way that taught you how to hate yourself and made fell less than beautiful for being raw and standing for something true, for making them uncomfortable with what may be revealed through your red lips in the shade of Goddess Fire people are only afraid to look into your eyes, because they know what you will see in them"
Cherry
me when i don’t get any attention
Rabbits between the staves. Cambrai BM 125-128, c. 1540-50
This month is the one year anniversary of posting my poem “Condolences” to TikTok and Instagram, where it amassed millions of likes and tens of thousands of comments.
Since, people have used the poem for adaptive art pieces, short plays, books, and class work. For your piece of art to be transformed into another…it’s difficult to describe.
After several rejections from poetry publications a decade ago, I decided to post my work online instead. The responses were overwhelming. I realized that an official publication doesn’t make you a poet. Writing poetry does, and bonus points if you manage to resonate with just one other soul who needed to hear what you needed to say.
I was utterly taken aback by the response to this piece. People have asked me many times to explain it, but from the response it was clear that the meaning can be explicated with a little time.
Some people who didn’t understand it until it was explained were angry when it came together. It wasn’t written for them.
I’m only grateful that it reached the people who needed it.
I feel that the imagery is part of the piece, but I know not everyone can or cares to listen to a video. Here is the poem:
———————
They buried a girl in my hometown today.
“A young woman, gone too soon, in the prime of her life,” they all said.
My friends and I all knew her. We grew up together.
We were in all the same classes and hobbies and we made up games together at recess.
But none of us went to her funeral. We weren’t invited, because the people planning it didn’t think we’d understand. They said it wasn’t our loss.
So we got together for drinks. We laughed all morning and played card games all day.
At 4 o’clock, we heard the church bells. We saw that long, sad procession of cars stretch like a creek through town, up the cemetery hill.
We heard strange rumors that night, that the casket was empty. That they put it hollow in the ground.
So we went to the plot first thing in the morning. They buried her empty box next to her dad, down the row from an estranged aunt she never really knew all that well.
There wouldn’t be a stone for months, but the little placard had my name on it. But not the one I go by these days.
“How strange,” we all said. “What a waste of good crying.”
All of this mourning for me, and I was down the street the whole time, laughing and drinking.
But some people will never understand. They’d rather plan a funeral than learn a new name.
My friend said she felt sorry for them, in some small way.
What a sad notion—to lose a daughter who never lived—
And a son who never died.
Recently I performed at a poetry event and spoke a slightly updated version of this (not many changes) and someone accused me of plagiarizing myself, hahaha! It's not the first time that's happened when I've performed a poem I've posted online, but none have gotten so much attention as this one. Someone made a beautiful zine a few months ago adapting this piece, so it's been on my mind again. Thank you for all of the love.
Three flights, 2,000 miles from home (former) to home (for now). A bedroom with two beds, one taken, one bare. Mismatched borax-scented sheets from the hall closet and lying down six feet from a stranger (the latest). I know how to find home in strangers: Get used to the sound of their sleep. Depend on the sound of their sleep. How do you say this in your language? What do you like to be called? Love people you cannot stand, Hold their hand in the emergency room. Depend on people who cannot stand you. Ask them for rides to the grocery store. Learn each other’s recipes. Like the way they do yours better. Hate each other’s dirty dishes. Understand the vast distance between your histories and forgive every day the things you don’t understand about each other, and never will. Understand that few people will understand But that every new stranger will understand the perfect intimacy of being strangers in a warm kitchen at the end of a very long day. Two flights, 3,000 miles from home (never again) to home (possibility, never the same). Miss the sound of their sleep. Sorry I just saw this text. (and I love you) Will you be my work reference? (and I love you) Sorry I never check this group chat anymore. (and I love you) Yes, I’ll be at your wedding. (And you love me) We both hate that it’s been so long. I see your milestones in pictures and imagine a time when I was in them. Share old ones and imagine a time when I might be again. Conspire an apartment with two bedrooms and a way back (forward). I know how to make my home in impossibilities. I’m so glad you called. I’m sorry I missed your call. My mom says hello. I’m sorry she never remembers your name, my sibling that she’s never seen, our convergence the pivotal moment in my grownup life she’ll never know. I made that dish last night for dinner. I saw your photo. I read your texts. I listened to that song. Next time we’re in the same time zone, promise that we’ll sleep beside each other again.
"Homes."
I challenged myself to write a poem in 15 minutes, and chose the topic of seasonal work and work housing, frequent moves, and the sudden intimacy you have with people you rarely see again.