Fall into the nether
Fall into the nether
Neither here
Nor there
The mythical is most alluring,
When one has that from which to run.
They told me there is power
To be held within the truth.
Here begins your journey.
Your spiritual awakening.
A step into the unknown world
few receive an invitation to.
Don’t you feel grateful?
Don't you know how lucky you are?
A step through the two-way mirror,
Tentative and meek,
Foot falling into damp green grass,
Flower petals and blue skies,
The orchestra announcing your arrival.
There is meaning there, there is purpose.
No more questions, no more uncertainty
Eternity at your fingertips
Reach out and discover the meaning of all.
They don’t tell you of the river,
When you set upon a small canoe
And sail down the riverside,
Smiling far and wide.
The ending is a waterfall,
A thousand feet to go before
The water glistening below
And the water is so dark
So dark
It's almost black
And it gurgles
And it spits
And it calls to you invoices
Menacing and deep
And tells of the ways
Death will call upon your name.
Fall into the nether.
Neither here nor
There
A free fall for the ages
A scream trapped in your throat
You will never be able to release
All the green envy you’ve ever felt
Escaping through your pores
Fermented poison clogging up
Your nose and making your eyes water
Fall into the nether
Neither here
Nor there
Every darkest fear you've had
Every mistake you've made
Every bad decision
Prohibition
Inhibition
Atone! For your sins
In blood and gore
Tear apart your clothes until
You tear at skin
There is no place for tears
Here, oh sweet child
Don't you want to know
Who made us?
Agony unlike
Any which you've felt before
They call it ego death
Ego is the death of all
But it feels as if your soul
Your very essence bleeding dry
The catastrophe of one's destruction
There is no place for fear here and yet
You are terrified
You'll beg for it to stop
I don't want to know
I want to live
Please let me live
I don't want to know who
Created us
Or what my purpose is
I want to read good books
And watch tv
Please
Please
Please
Please I miss my mom
And this is how it ends:
please
mama
please
mama
please
mama
What does failure feel like?
If failure had a face he would be a man. Perhaps short and fat, or tall and lanky. Perhaps his skin would be pearly white or mud brown. If failure had a face I would recognize him in a line up no matter how he looked that day.
I met failure on the second day of primary school, the day I brought back that English test. Changed a 3 into a 5 and hoped nobody would notice. They did of course. I didn't have the smarts back then to use the same color pen.
I met failure at the gasoline station when I was 16, carrying five boxes of cereal, four candy bars, three packets of milk, two packs of cigarettes, and one pregnancy test.
I met failure when he was a short man with black hair and puffy face, he wore the same green t-shirt every day with a self-made jackson pollock painting of ketchup and mustard on the front. When he lived in a run-down apartment clothes and papers and matches and lighters skittered around the floor. A mattress on the ground, no sheets, no pillows. I ate pizza with him and got high on what was supposed to be weed but barely made the effort. We sat on the sofa so long the outline of my back is still imprinted on it like the signature I never intended to leave. We drank cheap whiskey and smoked cigarettes and talked about living the high life and laughed at the sheep that went to school to chase careers. Couldn’t they see how happy we were rotting on that couch?
I met failure when he was beautifully alluring, his voice husky and soft, his eyes bright and glowing. All dilated pupils and runny nose. We spent years together in club bathrooms. White-hot power shot straight up the nose. Coursed through our veins and made us wonder. Is this what it felt like to be a god? He told me how easy it is to take, to lie, to steal. That if they left it in the open they deserved to be taught a lesson. We would be that lesson. And we were. Until we weren’t.
I saw failure everywhere I went since I was a little girl. I saw him in my promises, in my mother's tears, in my father's rage, in my desires and my ambitions. I saw him at that hospital.
When I broke up with failure he raged for hours, made me sob until the tears felt painful against my swollen cheeks, until the gasps I made were not for air but for release - release from him. He held me by the hair, tight grip in my golden locks pulling me up and slamming me into the wall again and again and again.
If failure had a face he would no doubt be a man. Golden curls and swollen face, brittle bones, and sunken eyes. His face would look like mine.