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sophie Jan 2021
6.
home doesn’t always feel like home anymore
she thinks
not when presences are missing and
all she can feel within those walls is suffocated
that house cannot feel like home anymore
she thinks
she needs an out
Timmy Shanti Jan 2021
the beat
the everlasting
never-ending pulse
the heat
dreaming
no music but house
city lights
teasing, fooling around
shaking through and through
i feel the presence of the sound
although i have no clue
pulsating within me
vibrating around
that's how i like my music
fast and furious
as a hound
tearing the silence apart
melodies go for a twist
owner of a lonely heart
never lost in the mist.
old af!
2012
almost old as me
who cares as long as it's still relevant , right? :)
inspired by Joonas Hahmo - Tampere by Night
Daisy Ashcroft Jan 2021
There was a girl,
She’s gone now,
Who lived and breathed
Imagination and life,
(Aren’t they the same thing?).

She saw the house down the street
And thought it a monster
Never that it was replete
With the emptiness  
An innocent bungalow will foster.

Air was to her
As glass water that sings
About its giggling spring
And she would awaken
At its dance upon her skin
As she breathed it all in.

The air is now
As water, grey like mercury,
That dampens what the eye can see
And it is chagrin
That is awoken
At a world so forsaken.

Nietzsche was mistaken
When he proclaimed
Our God as dead.
It’s the vision and
Stories for which we used to aim
That expires instead.
Susana Jan 2021
A big house
is a lovely house,
a rich house,
a warm house.

A beautiful woman
is a cherished woman,
a clean woman,
a noble woman.

Both radiate:
her skin glows,
its columns shine
and the windows, oh so clean.

Try and look inside
you can't
              Can you?
take a peek.

As though its windows are clean
and her smile is inviting,
you can only gaze at the exterior
for when you get through the gate, the skin

The interior
is not
so
glamorous.
Victoria Jan 2021
My grandmother sticks sewing pins in the walls
Sharp, invisible pins with the bulbs sticking out
She claims they moved there by themselves
True, I’ve never seen her do it-

But there’re needles in the floor
Tiny, sinister needles with the smallest eyes
She says she doesn’t mind them
Slides on her black slippers

And she walks
Dylan Stanton Dec 2020
Hidden in a forest, a house surrounded by trees. The traffic was sparse, the silence was deafening, the environment was so ominous, so frightening, it was easy to feel so lost in the looming trees. Across the house appeared three street lamps which dimly illuminated the street, shedding light on each crack on the sidewalk, each crushed can laying on the ground, it captured the areas that tried to hide from the naked eye.

I scratched my elbows as I entered the old front gate, which creaked as it opened. I wandered aimlessly around the garden as lonely as a cloud, searching for something that didn’t want to be found. The solid brick walls, the magnificent arched window, the windowsills which longed to be touched by the light. I passed by the wilted plants which were hidden behind the majestic tree in the garden, yet the soil remained dry, dehydrated, almost incapable of facilitating life.

Finally, I found myself facing the front door, which read 2610. I clasped the doorknob and twisted, the door opened wide, already unlocked.  Suddenly, I found myself walking through the hallway towards the kitchen as I stared at the wooden floor, filled with organized patterns and intricate designs, something so beautiful which I never had the time to admire. The kitchen was spotless, with the exception of a few pieces of cutlery scattered across the table. Adjacent to the kitchen was the bathroom, I entered the small room, the lights were dim, the windows were foggy. A draft of cool air from the window went down my back, I laid my hand on the cold faucet handle and twisted it, water flowed out of the spout, and I cupped my hands, creating a small pool of water. I raised my hands to my face as I splashed the water against my forehead, attempting to clear my mind of the memories flooding back, memories which I didn’t want, didn’t need, and when I looked up towards the mirror, nothing looked back.

Eventually, I made my way to the stairs, the soft carpet cushioned my feet as I walked, the sense of support comforted me. The stairs led me towards the long foreboding hallway, the lights slowly dimmed, the photos on the wall followed me as I walked past them. At the end of the hallway, I found a boy seated by his bedside, his elbows dry, his eyes-wide, he hugged his knees as he cradled himself back and forth. I couldn’t help but notice the poorly weaved basket in the corner of the room, in between the holes of the basket sat a small stuffed panther, it looked like a panther behind iron bars. I returned my gaze to the child, he sat there helpless, and in my vision, I saw the trees slowly engulf him, leaving him in nothing but solitude, his cries left unheard, his hands left untouched, his tears left unwiped. He existed in a prison with no walls, a prison of the mind, for he was lost in the trees.
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