Esmé Weijun Wang The collected schizophrenias
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Esmé Weijun Wang The collected schizophrenias
Joy Sullivan, “If I Had a Hundred Lives to Live”, Instructions for Traveling West
"The Resemblance Between Your Life and a Dog" by Robert Bly
(grabs you by the shoulders) you have to make room for new experiences in your life. you have to go through the unpleasant work of leaving your comfort zone, even if just for a few minutes at a time. because if you don't, your brain will trick you into stagnation. you will start to believe that the world can barely fit you in it. but that's not true. it's the opposite way around. you can fit the whole word inside of you. your task is only this: to welcome it with open arms
Concerning that prayer i cannot make by Jane Mead
Just a simple eraser collection update :)
fr. “Snowshoe to Otter Creek” by Stacie Cassarino
James Baldwin in conversation with Nikki Giovanni
umm how to be a dog by andrew kane. btw.
in case you didnt fucking know
Dinosaur, Richard Siken
the tragedy of distance is simple I want to sit on the couch with you and do nothing sometimes
death poem by Kim Addonizio
How Some of It Happened
by Marie Howe
My brother was afraid, all his life, of going blind, so deeply that he would turn the dinner knives away from looking at him,
he said, as they lay on the kitchen table. He would throw a sweatshirt over those knobs that lock the car door
from the inside, and once, he dismantled a chandelier in the middle of the night when everyone was sleeping.
We found the pile of sharp and shining crystals in the upstairs hall. So you understand, it was terrible
when they clamped his one eye open and put the needle in through his cheek and up and into his eye from underneath
and held it there for a full minute before they drew it slowly out once a week for many weeks. He learned to lean into it,
to settle down he said, and still the eye went dead, ulcerated, breaking up green in his head, as the other eye, still blue
and wide open, looked and looked at the clock.
After our father died, my brother promised me he wouldn't. He shook my hand on a train going home one Christmas and gave me five years,
as clearly as he promised he'd be home for breakfast when I watched him walk into that New York City autumn night. By nine, I promise,
and he was, he did come back. And five years later he gave me five years more. So much for the brave pride of premonition,
the worry that won't let it happen. You know, he said, I always knew I would die young. And then I got sober
and I thought, OK, I'm not. I'm going to see thirty and live to be an old man. And now it turns out that I am going to die.
Isn't that funny? One day it happens: what you have feared all your life, the unendurably specific, the exact thing. No matter what you say or do. This is what my brother said: Here, sit closer to the bed so I can see you.
Tenderness is the most modest form of love. ……..Tenderness is spontaneous and disinterested; it goes far beyond empathetic fellow feeling. Instead it is the conscious, though perhaps slightly melancholy, common sharing of fate. Tenderness is deep emotional concern about another being, its fragility, its unique nature, and its lack of immunity to suffering and the effects of time. Tenderness perceives the bonds that connect us, the similarities and sameness between us. It is a way of looking that shows the world as being alive, living, interconnected, cooperating with, and codependent on itself.
—Olga Tokarczuk || The Tender Narrator, Translated by Jennifer Croft and Antonia Lloyd-Jones
Joy Sullivan, from Instructions for Traveling West: Poems; “Howl”
Swimming, One Day in August by Mary Oliver
Night Poem, Leila Chatti