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there was a blackness

that inked her arms

and filled her lungs

and told her she was not good enough

that there was no light,

only the dark and the dark and the dark.

that They would win.

They had guns

and hate

and war

and war.

and They might win.

the blackness told her they would win.

and she was nothing.

she was nothing.

she looked out onto the great sky

and wondered if she was the first to feel this way.

she realized she must not be.

she wondered how they stopped feeling this way.

would she ever stop feeling this way?

she heard the birds sing and

she saw the sun glow

and she saw all the light and life,

but it did not make her feel alive.

she wanted to feel alive again,

to breath and cry and love.

but They had their weapons

and schemers

and sciences set to do great evils.

and she was nothing.

she was nothing.

she felt an internal war raging inside of herself,

but she did nothing to settle it.

why should she?

she had never tried this internal war.

it left all this space for possibility

she decided she liked the idea of possibility.

there was the possibility that tomorrow might be a little better.

there was also the possibility is might be far worse.

she frowned.

where could she find the alive feeling?

was it hidden in the paradox of carcinogenic cigarettes,

or in cups of burning liquor,

or in the bitter beauty of a clean silver blade

against her porcelain skin?

but then she remembered they had blades.

Oh, They had knives and shanks and swords,

so she set aside the sharpness

with trembling fingers.

she looked out onto sky once more

it's color now dark and as unsure as her

and even in the peaceful nightfall she could

hear the leaves rustle and insect click

and she could see the sort of life there.

something was always alive

it was just never

her.

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