| The fool loves completely.
|
| He stands with arms wide open, hoping to give away hugs for free.
|
| He does not consider this work, he believes this is necessary.
|
| Believes someone has to put a positive spin on the term arms dealer.
|
| So he gives out hugs for free.
|
| He stands with arms open like invitations to a party.
|
| No need to rsvp, you are cordially invited here right now.
|
| No need to disavow a need to be held.
|
| Weld your arms around his shoulders, glue your cheek to his chest,
|
| test his commitment if you must.
|
| The fool will never let you go, nor will he keep you forever.
|
| He will be yours until you say so.
|
| He doesn’t know how to hold on.
|
| He doesn’t stay long enough to see if the boomerang comes back.
|
| He doesn’t pack lightly.
|
| He will be first in line for the party of his demise, but will surprise even
|
| death by leaving early.
|
| He was raised with no sense of direction.
|
| If it comes down to it he will fall up.
|
| He will rattle a cup looking for change, because he can’t stand the sameness.
|
| He will dismiss the simple questions. |
| Don’t ask him how it’s going.
|
| He doesn’t want to tell you what’s new.
|
| He is deaf to weather reports, and blind to cute pictures or your dog cat or
|
| baby.
|
| He will however look at your fish.
|
| He will listen to and record screaming lobsters, that he will then remix into
|
| extremely dope but haunting beats to be blasted through car stereos in the
|
| parking lots of seafood restaurants.
|
| Don’t question his methods.
|
| The fool doesn’t know how to stop, but he is expected to understand in the
|
| instant his hand is let go.
|
| He is expected to know that the tiny kindnesses were just pretend.
|
| He is expected to transcend his own feelings and step aside to make way for the
|
| something better that so suddenly came along.
|
| The justification plays in his mind like a theme song for a bad cereal.
|
| Silly creature,
|
| love is for humans.
|
| He smiles as his ears become garbage bins, filling with the throw away advice
|
| that people always give, but never seem to take.
|
| His body becomes the lake into which others will throw the stone of his heart, |
| hoping it will sink beyond rescue.
|
| Even in this he will glue his hands together, and wish you an unrelenting
|
| happiness.
|
| He will plant a kiss upon each open wound where love left him to bleed.
|
| Each kiss a seed blooming into a wreathe that he will rest upon the headstone
|
| of the grave, where he stands in solitude to pay respect to whatever this was.
|
| He will do this because that’s what he does
|
| His love does not end.
|
| He will bend it back to the beginning, wrapping the finish line around your
|
| waist like a belt, just so you can feel what he felt when he held you.
|
| When he knew nothing of ownership.
|
| When he refused to slip chains around you because he knew then, as again he
|
| knows now, how obedience is only beautiful when it is given.
|
| He will be the nail driven in to the coffin of your doubt.
|
| He will tell you the truth about this race you’ve been running.
|
| The only finish line is death, and whether hurried, whether slow and steady,
|
| ready or unwilling, one day you must win
|
| Stand as still as a mountain if you must. |
| Your finish line is running towards you, so smile and trust that we, all of us,
|
| will arrive at the same destiny.
|
| For now you are the inventor of your history.
|
| So be creative, live like the world around you is your workshop,
|
| swap out the parts that don’t work for the ones that do.
|
| Build through the hurt.
|
| There will be hurt.
|
| There will be disappointment and guilt.
|
| There will be monuments built for the sole purpose of celebrating all of the
|
| awful that must exist simply to give us beautiful contrast.
|
| The fool will walk past all of it.
|
| He will split atoms with his heels, as if each new step forward reveals a tiny
|
| chaos left tumbling in his wake.
|
| He will break himself open and offer up his trust, knowing it is the only gift
|
| worth giving, that the hardest part of living, is watching what others will do
|
| with it.
|
| But the fool believes.
|
| The fool believes that there are those who would keep it bastioned within the
|
| heavy chambers of their marrow, sacrificing their own bones for its protection,
|
| that the risk of finding one honest connection in the midst of bedlam is what |
| makes the hurt worth it.
|
| There will be days when he is spent, days when his heart becomes the low rent
|
| housing that others use to store their back up plans.
|
| His life will be the piece of string between two tin cans where the lovers
|
| perform the high wire act of happiness.
|
| He will not consider this unfair.
|
| He will refuse his instinct to care less, the first one to say «guess it wasn’t in the cards» will get the obvious kicked out of them,
|
| and he will lean in to tell them.
|
| It wasn’t in the dice either.
|
| It wasn’t in the dominoes god I don’t believe in knows.
|
| It wasn’t in the air.
|
| It was beyond atmosphere.
|
| It was everywhere all at once.
|
| It was so beautiful, people will forever question if it even existed.
|
| It will be listed in between Bigfoot and Loch Ness.
|
| People will press science for an answer that science can never give.
|
| It will live in the imaginations of the foolish, those few willing still to
|
| wish upon stars and believe even in the smallest percentage of possibility.
|
| It will be hope, and you can’t have it until you’re willing to admit that there |
| are times when the only honest answer is «I don’t know».
|
| The fool will go through life at the same time life goes through him.
|
| He will pour himself past the brim, and swim through the mess he has made,
|
| knowing that he played his part the only way he could.
|
| That he stood still when asked to move.
|
| He did this to prove that the only things that belong to us are the choices we
|
| choose.
|
| That we lose everything by risking nothing.
|
| That we bring about our own ending by pretending away our pain, as if we were
|
| somehow above it.
|
| The fool steps blindly, reminding us we cannot simply bear what is necessary,
|
| we must love it. |