Peripheral VisionA Poem by Kristina MoulaisonI realized, a broken windshield too late, the poignancy of my situation. As I picked the broken glass out of my hair, I paused to consider, how moments before impact I was staring at the water droplets collected on my side window, wondering if I could
balance one on top of a pin. Just how long it would sit there before bursting. I watched that one drop shatter into a hundred more as they danced around my head. Ah! I was an astronaut, just before the black, floating against all comprehension. Trusting twisted metal to keep me intact... When I awoke, I still felt nothing. Blind terror is a monster too massive to comprehend. We must look to its sides, tunneling deep into obscurity. Swallowing it to lock in subconscious dungeons requires a precise concentration. You must succeed in blocking out all but the minutest, most irrelevant details and blowing them up until they can block out something the size of the sun.
The petals caught the wind, drifted slowly and came to rest atop my Mother's wooden box. I wondered, vacantly how long they could possibly keep under so much dirt. © 2017 Kristina MoulaisonFeatured Review
Reviews
|
Stats
520 Views
11 Reviews Shelved in 1 Library
Added on February 21, 2013Last Updated on September 21, 2017 AuthorKristina MoulaisonBellingham, WAAboutI write. Read me. We don't read and write poetry because it's cute. We read and write poetry because we are members of the human race. And the human race is filled with passion. And medicine, la.. more..Writing
Related WritingPeople who liked this story also liked..
|