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  Feb 23 Vianne Lior
Malia
the flower has eyes
and she watches
as her pale petals curl and
turn brown on the edges, she
watches as she wilts, as her leaves
start to dry, she watches
as the parts of her she used
to admire start to fall, piece by
piece, and she watches as she
disintegrates,
becoming the dirt and she watches as
the housekeeper sees her and frowns and
then throws her away into the
trash.
she watches as she becomes
trash.
and she cannot save herself.
not having the best day
  Feb 23 Vianne Lior
Carlo C Gomez
Tar-dark world. The defining color is black, the inky night of her nocturnal hunts and the deep, bottomless dark of her alien retreat.

A watcher of men, she is everything and nothing. She might be too much of something, or too little of something else. Time will sort out the particulars.

There are no simple entry points – she demands engagement, and to be taken as a whole. Her discomfort is over her own allure, her undisturbed surface. It’s more about intuition and gesture than dialogue. They remain as echoes. They’ve made her beautiful in a real way, with hips and blemishes and dimples in her skin.

The imprint of the lives she begins to grapple with as her time on Earth extends, leads her to stop seeing herself as a mere conduit for her mission, and to start developing a sense of subjectivity.

Her life force is overlapping, shaping itself into a pattern of rings that simultaneously suggests a birth canal dilating, the stages of a rocket separating, and a lunar eclipse as seen through a telescope’s lens.

She's a life-form you can’t quite understand, but it’s carrying on relentlessly, like a beehive, moving backward through the constellations at first approach.
Vianne Lior Feb 23
No hands held. Yet—
footfalls in requiem.
Earth hums beneath them.

He trails. Watches.
Vermillion silk spills through her fingers,
each fold—a benediction,
each shade—resurrection.

Radios. Lined like relics.
Fingers ghost dials, conjuring static.
Three at home. Yet he lingers.
Lost frequencies, lost years.

Food court air—thick.
"Too much salt."
Yet her fingers, thieves of gold
steal warmth from his plate.

Flowers.
Nameless.
Still sacred.

She scoffs. He brings them.
Later, hands tremble.
Petals pressed between prayer, altar glow.

Kitchen—
war, worship.
His rotis dense as dusk,
her chai black as omen.
Knives cut too large, voices cut sharper.
Steam rises, laughter spills.
They eat—of hunger, of habit, of home.

Balcony—
where silence exhales.
She hums, porcelain waltzing.
He watches the world unravel,
stories fraying at the hem.
Threadbare.
Yet she would unravel without them.

Night.
Pills pressed into his palm.
She drifts first—breath slow, seabound.
He lingers—
memorizes rise, fall.
His fingers—finding hers.
Light. Familiar. Home.

Then—absence.

Tea—one cup, untouched.
Flowers fade.
Food court—loud, empty.
Radios mute.
Balcony still waits.

Some nights—
air quivers, hush of leaves.
A whisper, almost.

And just before sleep devours her,
her hand searches—
not for emptiness,
but the ghost of his touch.

Because even in dreams,
he promised
"I’ll find my way back to you."
Two loveliest souls—one here, one beyond. Love lingers, even in absence.
A berry dropped from a bush
rolled in the earth and hid under a leaf
and listened to the searching
of squirrels and birds
for what seem a lifetime

The following year it burst
gripped the earth and held on
peeped out into the forest
and stretched its self up into the sky

The sun fed it with warmth
the earth nurtured it
and a berry blossomed
and dropped to the earth
  Feb 23 Vianne Lior
Heavy Hearted
Red & blue sage in remembrance of you
Gladiolus, carnations-
pink poppies too.

While foxglove protects
With larkspur and flax,
The windflowers wilt but always grow back.

White lilies for hope
And forget-me-nots true,
an innocence captured in their ambiguous blue.

Griefs Pink and white orchids,
Support’s crimson rose-
the healing of hyacinth,

flowers & prose.
written in  tribute, to the family of a good friend.
Vianne Lior Feb 23
Sapphire tongues unfurl,  
hummingbirds drink liquid silk,  
air sings—syrup-laced.

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