wristwatch
By JupiterMoon
- 523 reads
wristwatch
i haven’t worn a watch
since i lost the last one
aged 23
it was a present,
later stolen by a girl
in a nightclub, i think
that fight with a table of guys
all twitching to drag knuckles,
purported to be about the watch
rather than the girl
i realise now
it was about the part of me
that was used to being hurt
since that day
i’ve felt no need to keep track of time
and in doing so,
i’ve let it rush me
like an assault in an unlit alleyway;
i hear the hurrying of feet behind
but there’s not enough time for escape
it’s over 20 years
slipped in since
and now my lungs
whisper at night
thinking about cancer
and that future, that for so long
was a serene white page
of potential
now
is only white noise, static
flickering like a bulb
that has accepted its shining
has become finite;
each bright effort
reduces its endurance
double the years
since i last looked upon a wristwatch
now less than half of the hope
of those days remains
it doesn’t feel enough
to forge a future
anymore
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Comments
The long white page ahead of
The long white page ahead of potential can turn out very short for some. We're more inclined to think of it as finite as we get older. Isn't the phrase, 'Nothing certain except death and taxes'? So, the offer of eternal home and real hope should become more attention-grabbing. Rhiannon
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