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A poem: Continuous deathly worries

A poem by Matt Whalan, with an illustration by Alison Lee.

I sometimes think I saw or see bursts

Of light in my dying distances and

Distances yet to be traveled

But they either flicker out or stay eternally distanced.

My future is like a field of lightening bugs

Flashing and blackening every second,

Everywhere and nowhere.

Or it’s like a long night of insomnia in the frigid middle of winter

Because what is the human experience but kicking and tossing

In the dark,

In the cold,

Fearing to shed pathetic blankets

And expose a human tenderness to the raw,

Ripping atmosphere?

Man has no reason to continue in life

Other than that he thinks he may have seen

Bursts of light.

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The Edge Is Free To Read.

But Not To Produce.