Saturday, February 23, 2008

Five Steps

My fingers tapped furiously as the seconds waned, fewer times in my life had I felt such urgency. The undertaking seemed so simple, write a note explaining what I was doing, where I was going, and when, if ever, I would be back. However, I soon realized that I could not explain in absolute terms what I had dreamed in the abstract: I was going far away, to forget this life and begin a new one. Those train tracks had always given me solace, now they would be my ticket out of the hopelessness of pre-set futures and a typical existence. Five sentences was enough, they were simple and sparse, merely explaining that I was leaving at age fifteen, to find something I’d always felt I was missing but could never put into words.

As I walked out of the house that had never quite been home, I wondered when I would see it again, but with headlights approaching, I ducked behind a tree, and the question was gone and my thought process diverted to more important things. With a strong step forward, I set off on the five-hundred foot walk to the tracks.

It was there, at the foot of the mighty train tracks, the symbol of the “Go west, young man” movement, where I hoped my exodus would begin. The clock struck 1 Am and as the roaring train crept into view; my blood ran cold thinking about hundreds of tons of steel barreling towards my fragile being.

One boxcar, two boxcars, terrified, I counted, aware that I would have to jump inside one of them, and knowing full well how dangerous this practice was. However the terror of staying in small-town America wishing for more than an average life frightened me more than the possibly impending death.

Finally, on the fifth boxcar, I jumped on, fingers grasping for a grip on anything to pull myself to safety. As one hand slipped off I felt the rush of adrenaline, but my second hand held fast, fingers gripping a handle, enduring by willpower alone. Suddenly another hand appeared out of the blackness and pulled me inside. As I sat, fearful and exhausted, I could barely see that sitting in front of me was the owner of the hand that saved my life; an old man in tattered clothes who introduced himself as Manny.

“So, youngster, decided to try your luck with the rails, eh?” He asked with a knowing grin. “I guess so, the age-old escape method” “I see, where are you headed?” His question threw me for a moment when I realized I had no set destination in mind. “I’m not sure; I suppose it doesn’t matter, anywhere, everywhere.” With his reply, my heart stopped beating: “Son, don’t you know that everywhere is just five steps away from here?”

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

your the biggest fucked up son of a bitch but still miss you, hope lifes good





they say the only words worth hearing, are those of simplicity

Said in a childish tone with an adult intonation

all things are valuable in this tone

The simple things, that will always be our downfalls



nothing will cut deeper

Than those words of simplicity, said in maturity

which will sink

Our ever-ailing ships



the ships ever ailing

The truth of those words, stands alone

in their timelessness

In their hopelessness