Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song Like Blood from a Stone, artist - Old Gray. Album song Slow Burn, in the genre Пост-хардкор
Date of issue: 08.12.2016
Record label: Flower Girl
Song language: English
Like Blood from a Stone |
there’s a girl, a tall girl, with eyes like honeycomb |
& jasmine. |
sometimes she blows cigarette smoke |
in your face in the break room, and you call that love. |
not because it is, but because you want it to be, |
because you’re so goddamned lonely, so goddamned |
unable to handle the ocean roar in your ears |
when you’re alone. |
you tell yourself that the ash |
in your lungs is a kiss goodnight, and you write poems |
about the smoke tendrils whispering off her lips, |
how beautiful they are, like the aching arms of god |
you want them to be. |
one night, you’re tired, |
so very tired, your eyes as heavy as water. |
you forget |
where you are, in the break room at a walmart at 2: 30 |
in the morning. |
you leave your notebook unattended |
on the table, left out for anyone in the world to see, |
and one of your coworkers picks it up. |
he reads the poems |
you wrote about the girl with honeycomb & jasmine |
in her eyes. |
you panic when you realize what just happened, |
because the boy who just picked up your notebook, |
he’s a cruel boy, with eyes like shotguns & razorwire. |
he buys you razorblades on your birthday |
so you can do the job right the next time, |
you fucking freak, and you can’t believe that |
you aren’t one, can’t believe you deserve to be |
anything. |
some days you don’t even try to hide |
the angry marks on your arm, like your skin is a test |
where you got every question wrong. |
one night, |
there’s a box-cutter with a brand new blade, a stack |
of cardboard boxes begging to feel its tooth. |
you dig in |
but something’s wrong, the fiber’s too gnarled and you |
can’t seem to cut clean. |
you push, hard as you can, |
feel the stiff tangle of glue give way, and there’s blood |
on the floor, the blade half an inch in your wrist, |
but you don’t feel it. |
the shift manager’s in your ear, |
angry because he has to take you to the hospital. |
there’s a janitor who’ll forever hold it against you |
for staining his clean, clean floor, and there’s everyone |
you work with & their hostile eyes glaring, knowing |
this was coming all along. |
there’s that cacophony, all |
those ghosts reminding you of your destiny for failure. |
and there’s another blade, and there’s a bottle of pills, |
a fifth of vodka, a hospital visit, two weeks of inpatient |
while your whole family prays for you to get better. |
there’s a doctor with blank eyes who never looks at you. |
he’s always scribbling things on his clipboard. |
everything |
you say, he documents. |
even when you’re not talking to him. |
you don’t smoke, but you still go out for smoke breaks |
with everyone else on the ward because there’s nothing else to do |
but stare at the walls, and wait for the next group session |
to start, so you hang out in the courtyard, not smoking cigarettes |
but still befriending those who do. |
and there’s a man, maybe |
ten years older than you, with eyes like roughcut pine & sunset. |
he notices you don’t smoke so he tries to stay downwind from you |
so he doesn’t exhale in your face. |
he tells you it’s okay bud, |
we’ll get through this and be better when we leave this place |
than we was when we got here. |
he’s telling you the truth, |
and you believe him. |
one day the doctor who doesn’t look at you |
comes to your room and tells you that your insurance isn’t paying |
for any more days, so you’re all better now, and you leave. |
your mom picks you up in the lobby. |
her eyes are the most worried |
kindness you’ve ever seen. |
and you go home. |
and you fight off |
the ghosts, which is easier now than it was before, because now |
you have a better set of tools today. |
and your life goes on |
like it was meant to, like you were always supposed to survive |
the fight. |
you stop writing poems about smoke tendrils trailing |
off the lips you once wanted to kiss, or about how your loneliness |
is so unbearable, because now you write poems about how to stay |
alive. |
you write poems about the places you feel at home |
rather than the places you wish you could be. |
one day, you catch |
a glimpse of someone in the mirror, and there you are, eyes |
like stubbornness & struggle, like the brick buildings in abandoned |
factory towns that refuse to completely fall. |
you look at all the scars, |
the history etched into your arms like a road map |
of where you used to be vs. the endless possibilities |
of where you are and where you can go now. |
and the smoke tendrils, once midnight black |
& swirling above your head, break away, leaving |
nothing in your view except the sky. |
and it is so perfect, |
and so clear. |