This life is so precious,
time so tender, we drive
to earn - yearn for more -
and recognize the drain
on our life and time;
tomorrow we'll start
making the change
into who we want to be,
but today we've wasted
the burst on who we are -
there is satisfaction there -
but more frustration
at not getting ahead
to where we want to be,
so we strive but we're tired,
and satisfied - comfortable -
and scared of uncertainty,
but certain in our circumstance,
we plunge into each new day
with hope we'll break the cycle
because maybe, tomorrow.
Alive
I am through.
No more will I play
the martyr's role;
there is no joy there.
I will not find fault in others
for my failure to achieve.
I will bear my yoke with thanks
for the experience provided,
and take up the cause
of my own happiness,
no longer leaving it to chance
or the whims of others.
I am no longer Life's victim.
I am unshackled.
I spread my arms wide
and embrace the air.
I am alive.
Walking
He stumbled from the bar into the raw, wet night, pulling his jacket tight against him. He didn’t remember the rain. The day had been pleasant, with high blue skies and ample sunlight, which was why he’d entered the bar.
A car splashed past, headlights blinding him. He remembered the smell before he entered the bar: the air was weighted down with the scent of storm.
He stumbled towards his car, then remembered he’d walked. He reversed course and moved off towards home. His feet carried him across the familiar streets as his mind spun with the Stolis.
He hadn’t meant to have more than three, but that number had doubled as the sound of the rain slapping the ground came through an open door at the back of the bar. He was comfortable there. It was warm, dry.
The bar stank of spilt beer, sweat and dying dreams. He loved it. It was so familiar. It felt like home.
He didn’t remember reaching his front stoop. He did remember it was no longer his front stoop. He pulled up his hood to block out the night air, and set off towards his hotel.
There were no lights on the street and the storm clouds had blocked out the moonlight. His feet found puddles in the broken pavement. He didn’t notice the cold.
He stumbled past other drunken revelers. He tried to read the time on his watch and regretted the shot of Fernet that made it illegible.
Tears filled his eyes. He wasn’t sure why, maybe the cold? He couldn’t stop them. He wiped away the snot and the tears and stumbled onward.
He wished he was in a car. He wished he was home.
He stopped before a blinking sign reading ‘Motel.’ He wondered how he had arrived here.