Here’s a poem I wrote many years ago that I wanted to share with you. It’s not an erotic piece, but I wanted to publish it on my blog anyways.
A girl kept dropping her pockets.
              She couldn’t keep them attached
              To the seam line of her corduroys
              Olive-stained and soft, cheeky
              Almost, as if her pants had a voice.
              She held on tight, though,
              To those dear pockets that tried
              To pack a knapsack and run away.
              Run away, from potential disaster,
              From responsibility. The pockets don’t
              Want to hold prized possessions of the girl’s.
              What if a teeny-tiny hole of
              Imperfection in the pocket lost
              All that meant something to this girl’s heart?
              The pockets would never be able to forgive
              Themselves, for gravity pulls their spirits
              Down, so that something will inevitably fall
              Out of this girl’s pocket, such as Chester.
              Chester was an acorn given, humorously
              From a boy. He cared for
              The acorn that day. But alas,
              Two steps on a nut–even accidental–will crack it.
              The boy slipped the broken nut into the departing girl’s
              Pocket. The acorn held potential for the future.
              Chester is filled with borrowed dreams
              But remained broken himself.
              How could he even live if he doesn’t have a face?
              For faces are what represent lives.
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A sweet poem. I read it a couple of times and every time something else caught my attention
Rebel xox
a lovely poem. I am with Marie, that is so much here. Thank you for sharing
You could read this poem over and over and see something different every time. Wonderful!
~Mia~ xx