Shoelace

Shoelace

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WpMetadataNoticeLast published Fri, Jun 26, 2015
These Poems are usually my point of view, what I believe is going on with me and other people. sometimes I might want to send a message, or just plain ol' writing. Be warned, I may also write thingsnunrelated to poetry, but nothing I post is posted by accident so it's okay to reD anything. I'm a Puertorican writer looking for people to see a little hope on our island. I just want to scream: Hey! We exist!!! Notice this lil' hunk of rock in the Caribbean! We got a lot to give! xD Thanks for the support, I really appreciate it. Comment your thoughts, if they are positive or negative, I don't mind, I could use the criticism, since I'm not perfect at writing. Who is perfect at anything? Don't answer that, hahah.
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I gracefully raced down to the bulging rocks, stretching across the shore. Eva was waiting for me, her gorgeous brown hair waving in the harsh winds that made our noses numb, and our cheeks turned red as roses. We had been here together as sisters, stranded at this farm. We had been homeschooled, and never really met anybody else, so when our parents died five years ago, nobody had thought to check and see if we were ok. We were set on surviving, and running our small farm by the lake in Iceland. We owned a few cats, a coop of a dozen chickens, and a handful of pigs. They all stay caged up inside, because we're afraid some would walk out the barn and never return. Along with the livestock, we had a small brick shed with a blazing red roof. It used to be where Father worked on making tools and such, but Eva and I have turned it into a secondary little house. There's a loft we stuffed full of crispy, warm hay. When nights on the farm are late, we stay there. Besides, it feels more like home. The house gets cold at times, and nightmares come upon Eva and I. But curled up next to each other in the loft, although uncomfortable, makes the nightmares not strike as hard. This is a collection of short stories, poems, and other writing. It ranges from stories of abandoned girls in the past, to the horrible end of the world in the future, to haiku about a forest, and a poem about waves washing up on the surface. Join me in the 20+ part and 13000+ word collection, and you're in for a real treat, filled with happy poems, and tragedies that are sure to wrench your heart. I will hopefully continuously add to this as a sort of scrapbook for my writing.

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