• Empty Casket

    Fade away to nothing so I can breathe. Fractured pieces that prove we are broken, if not only in the mind. Come and walk a different pathway of exile. Waiting to suffer the consequences of a misdeed. Because we are the echoes that forbade creativity. And I have never wanted to be the man that I am.    

    I was drinking Jim Beam that night when the thought had crossed my mind. There was a cool looking cemetery just up the road, and I have wanted to check it out at night since I moved here. So, I had almost finished a fifth of liquor when I started walking. I was hearing all the sounds the night makes when you are out alone, especially on a dark backroad.  When it’s so dark that you can’t literally see anything, you might as well be blind.

    There was a legend of an old man that haunts this place.  I’m not honestly sure believe in that kind of stuff, to be honest. I got to the cemetery and slowly opened the squeaky gate and went in. The head stones laid out in formation just like they were about to start marching. An eerie wind was rustling leaves around, blowing the trees.  The trees would softly creak, with the wind. I love the feeling when you get so scared you can feel it in your chest, and when your heart goes into your throat. But sometimes it doesn’t end so pleasant.

    As I was walking, I heard a deep growl right behind me, and I could feel breath on my neck. I took off running to a crypt close by. I was just barely able to make it to the door with a Doberman right at my heels. I ran inside and the wind must have caught the door just right, because it slammed shut.  I was now in a pitch-black room with a bunch of spiders, no light, and no way out because the door is stuck.

    2

    After the door shut, I was in a panic to get out of there. But the door was jammed and there was no way of opening it. There wasn’t much to help with the door.  So, I pounded on the door, yelling and screaming in futility. There wasn’t anyone who could help me. The panic did continue when a spider crawled up my face. But it did seem that we were entombed forever. I just hope someone came looking.

    I was scrambling around and found what looked like a bone and a rag, I was hoping to find another way out. I lit the torch, and the only door was the one we came in. I looked for a heavy stone to bang with or something, but to my utter dismay, there was nothing. After about 5 minutes the torch went out and I was in the dark again with all these foul arachnids.

    Nothing could have prepared me for what was next that night. I had given up trying to get out when I started hearing a slight scratching noise from the casket. “Maybe a rat”, I said then thought nothing of it. I sat there listening for it again…SCRATH SCRATCH. The noises were getting louder. The pure terror I felt at that moment was indescribable. It didn’t sound like a rat I had ever heard.

             A slow creaking sound like a casket opening filled me with absolute terror as I heard a moaning. Screaming did no good because nothing came out. Only a grunting like an old man,  in pain in a deep and raspy voice it moaned. I lay down in the floor in a cradle position, but then it all stopped as it sounded like a door being unlocked. It swung open, only for the other man to find only a skeleton in the fetal position and a closed casket.

  • Two Separate Worlds pt. 2

    We would walk for miles, down shadowy lanes. Talking for hours as if we were the only two alive. And in those moments, we were just that. We would walk for hours, through the woods, and down the narrow pathways beneath the falling leaves. Admiring the scenery as much as we were each other’s company. We would become lost, not in our way, but in each other. It was in moments like these that I realized how truly lucky I am to have you.

                We became friends at an early age, and our relationship blossomed. Our parents had their own problems with each other, but they could not stop us. They became friends in the end and accepted that we both had strong feelings for the other.

     We finished college; you finished school for addiction counseling, and I finished religious studies and became a minister of a beautiful church. We got married after college and started our careers.  You had picked up a job at a rehabilitation center and counseled addicts.  All your clients seemed to love you; from the rumors I had heard. 

    It was a beautiful wedding; we had it on the beach at sunset. The sun reflecting off the water brought out your true beauty. I cried more than you did. I will never forget your dad’s face when he walked you down the aisle. It was a look of admiration. When he gave me your hand you both looked at the other and smiled. That was the happiest I had ever seen him. The wedding went beautifully, and with a, you may kiss the bride. I felt complete. You threw the bouquet, and after a tussle, my mom caught it. We then drove off to start the rest of our lives together.

                We bought a house in a small town, but it did have its charms. We had saved all we could over a few years, and we finally could afford a house of our own. It was a white single story on a small patch of land, but we made it work. Our parents would visit often and if you ask me, they might have a little thing of their own going on. They were being flirty, but trying to hide it from us, as if they were children. I just hope they are happy.

                 Your father had been sobered for three months.  He started going to church on Sunday, which was a sight to see, he just never went before. I was ecstatic that he was going to church every Sunday. Even if it was a different one that I was ministering.  I could see a change in his eyes already. But to tell him that, he would just act like you were crazy.  Having my mom around as a friend had really been good for him.  And the more I saw them together, the flirtier they seemed.

                My mom had showed a real change too. She had seemed like she wasn’t as lonely since they had become friends.  She really hadn’t talked to anyone in a way such as that, in a while.  I asked her if there was anything she was wanting to talk about. But she said they was just friends…I didn’t believe them for a second. But it didn’t matter, just if she was happy.

                Our parents had admitted to us that they had started dating a while back.  We couldn’t understand why they would hide it from us unless they were ashamed of how they acted in the past. But the past was just that, the past. One day, a few months later, they both got in a heated argument. My mom left in a rage, and Jeremy thought he had really messed up. He was afraid he wouldn’t see my mom again. He came over to our house crying frantically, you said he acts out when he is upset. I was afraid of him acting out on you or me, so I made him leave. He refused to be drove and left on his own accord.

                We got a call later that night, Jason had gotten in an accident and was in the hospital.  I called mom and told her what had happened.  She rushed to see Jason with a broken leg, and two broken ribs and a slight concussion, where the steering wheel hit him, and he hit his head. But the doctor said he would recover; it would just take some time. My dad apologized for being a total jerk, and that he wished he could take back all he said and did.  Stacy just said she would need time.

                Jeremy came home with us, just until he recovered, and to give Stacy some space to think.  He seemed like his best friend had just died.  But he didn’t reach for the bottle, even though I could see it in his eyes and actions he wanted it. He was determined not to let the bottle get the best of him again. And I admired his drive to make his situation right.

                I tried not to get stuck in the middle of the situation, but I went to talk to my mom. I was worried about Jeremy.  “He wasn’t sleeping,” I told her. I could hear how upset he was at night when it was quiet. Night times always seem to be the worst in any given situation, or illness for that matter. Anyway, my mom admitted to missing Jeremy. She was just afraid he would break her heart. She didn’t want to see him in the mental state he was that night.

                After that, I left and went back home. A couple days later my mom knocked on the door.

    She asked Jeremy to go for a drive so they could talk. She had told him that her father would get drunk and hit her and her mom. She said she could feel it in her heart that she was falling for him. It not only hurt her but scared her to see him like that.  Jeremy had been going to AA meetings to try to overcome his problem, and that he only wished for her to wait to see a change in him. She said to show her a one-month sobriety pendant, and they would talk.

                Kimberly and I did all that we could to help Jeremy. But he was determined to do this on his own. I admired his drive; it takes a strong person to admit they were wrong and make things right. Stacy, he said, made him feel like he was they were the only two people alive. I kept telling him to work hard and ask God for guidance and all would work out the way it should. I told him that sometimes God puts us in these situations for our own good. Who knows why this happened, maybe it was supposed to happen this way. We shouldn’t question God, only trust the process.

                A month went by, and Jeremy got his one-month pendant and showed it to Stacy. I could see her eyes light up when she saw what Jeremy was willing to do to right the situation. Stacy rushed over to hug Jeremy. She said that they should get married too. So, Jeremy bought her a princess cut wedding ring with the last of the money he had. She told him not to get her an expensive ring, but he wanted to show her off.In the end, all that matters in life is that we rely on God, and do all we can to be happy. The rest will fall into its right place.

  • Love, Fade

    We faded away, along with a thought,

    Lost as if to say, we are more than not,

    Shackles forbade, listlessly we flow,

    With nothing, as if to say, we can’t go,

     

    Within a passing thought, you wane away,

    The only one I sought, lost to a new day,

    To be more than not, escape the cost,

    What lessons love taught, to be forever lost,

     

    Words that set us free, or reject forever,

    What’s distant to see, to possibly dissever,

    Is that you or me, I’m not sure whether,

    It’s truly meant to be, just us together,

     

    Wandering so lonely, as if in a song

    Feelings could be phony, doesn’t feel wrong,

    Tell me love’s testimony, and make it long,

    Reject sanctimony, now it’s gone.

  • Two Separate Worlds

    Listless echoes, still wanderers in the valleys of time. Broken shackles and a new sense of freedom overcome even the stronger willed. But now, as we wander, we begin to lose direction? For we, are lost and do not know the way. Will you help us to find direction? To a place where we shall arrive together. And then, become open to a new thought. But nothing too far out of the ordinary. For, we, are still in a new place.

    How many ways can a man fade into nonexistence? Broken and charred remains of a shattered existence. But now, as we come together as one. We realize, are the stirring whispers of two separate worlds. Distant memories of a place long forgotten. Lost inside, displaced by nonexistence. Far away from a distant escape. Now we fade, shaded and misplaced.

    Distant echos whisper, the memories of a time when we where young…We barely knew the other. But, as time moved forward, a bond strong enough to whether the darkest storms formed. As for our parents, they weren’t any help. They rejected our friendship from the start. All because they had their own problems. But I like to think, we helped them to help one another, in the end.

    We met in 5th grade, when you moved here, and became quick friends. We would play together in shaded places. We where afraid, that our parents would find us together. Your mom hated my dad and thought I was a bad influence. But I was nothing like my dad, and you knew that. But the more you tried to convince your mom of this, the more she forbade our friendship. My dad would get drunk and try to take his anger for your mom Stacy, on you. We would go out into the woods and hide together. I always felt so safe when I was with you. And now, I still do.

    School days come and go, like they always do. I would look forward to seeing you in class every morning. We would look at each other and smile, not knowing we both liked the other. The first time that we talked, we where on the playground. My father had gotten drunk and slapped me. I was sitting under a tree crying. You saw me and came to give me a flower. It was a buttercup, you called them. You told me to hold it under my chin and it would tell you if you liked butter by the reflection. We laughed and became quick friends.

                After my brother died, my father started drinking more.  Things just seemed to be too much for my mom to handle, because she left us both.  It was the hardest time period for my dad.  It seems like it got worse over time.  But you must understand, they had been together since high school.  They got married at a young age, and swore they would never have kids, my dad said.  But sometimes, I guess life throws you a curve ball.  Some people can handle tragedy better than others.  My dad was a very soft hearted and emotional person, behind the bottle.  I always thought I could fix him, but he didn’t want that.  He just wanted to drink and forget.  

                I don’t know too much about Jason’s mom, Stacy.  She knew my dad was a major alcoholic and wanted nothing to do with him.  She had seen him several times out in town drunk.  He was what she liked to call a shameful drunk, one of those crying drunks.  When she found out we were playing together all the time at school, she flipped.  She thought I would be a negative influence on Jason.  She would do anything to keep us apart.  It seems like if she was a real Christian, she would offer to help him.  I guess sometimes the best thing to do is ignore others selfish stupidity.

    We didn’t care about them though; we were becoming the best of friends.  We would say that they couldn’t keep us apart forever, and it was true.  We couldn’t wait to go to school to see one another.  As time went on, and high school came around, we saw each other in a different manner.  You bought me a rose on Valentine’s Day and asked if we could start dating.  It was the happiest day of my life, and I unquestionably said yes.  We smiled and had our first kiss.  We had no idea that this moment would change our lives forever.  

    The multiple layers of discontent began to slowly fade.  Our parents where their usual selves.  But my dad was becoming more depressed by the day.  Unknown to him, I had seen some scars on his arm.  I was worried, because he kept drinking more and more.  He said it was to kill the pain, but all he did was cry when he drank.  I think the moment everyone realized how serious his situation was, was when he had a suicide attempt.  He swallowed 132 pills and was in a coma for four days.  Even Stacy had a moment when she realized he might need help.  So, she invited him and I to church with her and Jason.  

    My father, of course, said no.  But Stacy would ask us every Saturday to go with you two.  One night, as my father was stumbling upstairs, he staggered and fell backwards down the steps and nearly fractured his neck.  But he walked away with a different attitude after that.  That next Saturday he told Stacy he wanted to come.  And then, to everyone’s surprise, they started to become friends.  I guess God works in mysterious ways sometimes, because he was really trying his best to change.

    We graduated high school and began to plan for our future together.  We both enrolled at the same community college.  Thank God for grants or we couldn’t have gone.  I wanted to become an addiction councilor so I could help other families through some of the same hard times we had.  We had made it through what I thought was the hardest times in our life.  Stuff like addiction can ruin families and even friendships, but that’s another story.  

    As for you, you wanted to do some religious studies.  Your mom was very pleased to hear you wanted to become a minister.  Your plan was to go to school and for us to get married once we had gotten settled in a profession.  But we couldn’t wait, we had been not only a couple, but best friends.  You were working a side job at a used bookstore, and barely scrapped enough money to get me a ring.  It wasn’t much, but that wasn’t the point.  

    We went for a walk down a creek road where your mom grew up.  It was so beautiful; the flowers were starting to bloom along the edge of the creek.  We took our shoes off and climbed over to the waterfall.  You proposed to me right there on what was your moms favorite rock to sit on.  I think they could hear me scream all the way down the end of the road.  We both had tears in our eyes as we held the other.

    The wedding was beautiful. We had it at a small country church just up from the creek. It was the one and only time I ever saw my dad wear a suit and tie. He walked me up the isle and gave me your hand. I was pretty sure his eyes were watering when he sat down. The preacher conducted the wedding. And with a, “you may kiss the bride,” we where married. And as for our future together, that will come in a different story

  • The Time We Spend

    by

    Awaken my child, walk with me for a time
    Let us strike a conversations, to help us find
    Something less than awkward, to help, as we pass
    Some places unknown, so wonderful and vast

    We wander so listlessly, without a single care
    Adventurers on a journey, not knowing where
    Time ticking slowly, the sun’s vast array
    Our words flow, until nothing is left to say

    As always, it has been a pleasure, to share this time
    Please visit again, the pleasure has always been mine
    The time we spend, means all of the world to me
    One day you too will take the time and you will see

    Until that day we will walk and converse
    Nothing to flashy, or nothing rehearsed
    Father and child, it means so much more
    Than any treasure on an island shore

  • Concluded

    Bring down, not, my spirit,
    For, this is a confusing journey;
    Living only to pretend,
    In this outward perception of reason!

    In this new place, am I now,
    For this mind is driven forward;
    And, is no longer lost to evil things
    Concluded…life is grand!

  • An Incandescent Luminescence

    The distance ahead, with its dull glow
    Midnight fades, as a listlessness begins to show
    Wretched demons that try to maintain your thoughts
    When You want to run and never be caught

    Stand up tall, and shut the door in your mind
    These things will help you more over a period of time
    Days when we think we will never recover
    Searching for the strength we have left to discover

    Walk with me, in the country, for awhile
    An eye on the distant beauties, laid for miles
    Days like these we find who we truly are
    Whether it lay here, there, or off really far

    Time…it does pass as if it where a dream
    Ticking faster and faster the more it seems
    We walk in God’s eternal beauty, after all
    So remember, to always, walk tall

    Things in life can always be worse than it is
    So don’t hide your eyes, in ignorance and bliss
    Just ask for an incandescent luminescence
    Something as beautiful as an emotional essence

  • A Conversation

    by

    What if the world wasn’t as it should be?
    It’s just an elaborate dream,
    What if words, where just sounds in a song?
    The thoughts that make everything wrong!

    Blankets of time, laid down like snow
    Broken days, things you shouldn’t know
    Have you a moment sir, I am in a heavy way
    It doesn’t matter if you have nothing else to say

    Days awaken like time, waiting just ahead
    Let us say no more, it has been said
    This time we shared was a pleasure…
    Yes, it was a pleasure

    So, unto this, the days we pass
    Awaken, as one, as if in a mass
    A conversation, to say, brings a smile
    Like sceneries passed In a mile

  • Reality Come Back

    Reality come back,
    For, I miss your sweet touch
    This much, I lack
    Reality, I miss you so much

    Listless life, if only to say
    Empty and forever forelorn
    Someone please, help me find a way
    Back to the life, in which I was born

    Shadows, in my mind, do condemn
    Voices sounding out loud
    Visons in my head again
    I miss the sweet silent sounds

    Visions of violence
    Blood and even more
    Sweet sounds of silence
    A life, i just don’t see what for

  • Stay Away

    You pushed away, now I’m drowning you out
    We have been beaten and we are still afraid
    No words to weigh, we are turning away now
    You think you’ve won, this is only today
    I am drowning you out
    Drowning you out
    Lost days and empty prayers I say
    Can’t help me escape now
    So long, we have been beaten and pushed away
    We are drowning your voice out
    Drowning you out
    I am drowning you out
    Shades of grey push you away
    Lost inside, a shade I stay
    Lost internal
    Feel infernal
    Pulsing inner turmoil…
    Away I stay, away I stay
    Just stay away stay away

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