A Journal of Arts & Letters

Month: July 2021

My Own Little Garden of Happiness by Abraham Gonzalez

From the Cracks by: Jonathan Sencion, Photography, 2020

My Own Little Garden of Happiness

“Flowers are the most beautiful when they are just about to die.” 

I think a lot of us have heard this saying before. I’ve seen people using it as an analogy for reflecting upon their lives when they are in a difficult situation, or when somebody is succumbing to an illness. It’s a phrase that perfectly encapsulates the act of washing away one’s selfishness, and giving one last love-letter to life before the moment of death. It never occurred to me that this saying refers to an actual phenomenon that happens with plants and flowers: they bloom right before their cycle of life ends. It might sound obvious to some, but in my 20 years of life, I had never bothered to study anything about gardening, or plants, nor did I ever try to have a garden of my own, so of course, all this was new to me. Until this winter, that is. 

For the past year, I have thought of sunflowers as very intriguing, beautiful plants. Once one germinates, the little flower starts following the sun, and grows toward its direction, as if it were a duckling looking for its mama. Once it blooms, it becomes a beautiful flower the color of the shining sun itself, but sadly, it dies shortly after, leaving behind hundreds of little seeds and creating another cycle of life. This cycle repeats itself roughly every two to four months, and slows down in winter due to the harsh weather conditions that make it tough for the seedlings to absorb sunlight and nutrients from the cold soil, and that is in the odd case that they manage to not freeze to death in the first place. 

With none of this prior knowledge, I finally bit the bullet and spent a whopping $10 worth of sunflower seeds and pottery to grow an indoor garden, that so far consist of a few cacti that are growing at a snail’s pace, and a surprising number of strong-willed sunflowers that grew in the most unfavorable of conditions. At first, I believed that only one seedling had survived the weather, since it was the only thing I saw rising from the brown soil for a couple of days, and the next thing I know, two, three, four, five, six, seven… Eight! Eight brave sunflower seedlings survived the winter. It made me so happy to see that my original sunflower now had such a large family. While the very first one had the name of Sunflowmon (extremely creative, I know) since I thought it would be the only one to grow, now I had to come up with an additional seven names for the other little ones. I read somewhere that Sunflowers are a symbol of loyalty and longevity since they can retain their beauty and form in the face of environmental conditions that would leave other flowers wilted. Seeing all these seedlings pop from the ground like that, seeing them thrive against all odds, man, it just inspires me. I want to be like my little sunflowers. I want to be a virtuous man that perseveres through the worst of conditions, I want to rise above everyone else, just like my sunflowers rose from a small seed and broke through the ground to display their majestic leaves and stems. I want to get better. 

As a first-time dad to a pack of sunflowers, I did what a good parent would do, and started playing music for them, since I had also read online that plants grow healthier when they listen to music. Jazz supposedly has sound frequencies that mirror those found in nature, which makes the roots grow larger towards the sound, and in turn, creates much larger plants. Sounds like something ridiculous, and it might just be, but I’m not taking any chances, I’m growing these flowers so that they are large and beautiful, and once they are old enough, I want to present them as a gift for my girlfriend, my big sunflower. That’s not the only fun-fact-that-might-just- be-a-load-of-BS that I read online, oh no! I also learned that plants react to the things you say to them, and that they grow healthier and prettier when you shower them with kindness and compliments. This seemed super sweet to me, and while at the beginning I was extremely shy to speak to my little seedlings, they are now the first thing that I greet once I get home! I tell them all sorts of things: about the music they listen to, I ask them how they are liking the music, I let them know about the weather, and I tell them to hold on just for a little longer, since winter will soon be over. I think they are listening to me, and that they are being strong for me. I think that I am raising them well, but I also think about how sad it’ll be to watch them grow to their certain death… and even if that’s when I’ll be able to reap the love and care that I put into them, it makes me a little sad to think that their beauty will only remain for a couple of days, before they wither, and give their final love-letter to the world in the form of new life. It’s making me tear up to think about this! And I haven’t been with these flowers for that long: there’s still a month until spring, and I just planted them this winter, after all. But it feels as if these little beings have changed something in me, like they are making me more emotional. 

Now that I think of it, it just makes sense that I planted sunflowers in the coldest and darkest season of the year. I come from a country with a very hot climate, usually around the 104 degrees in Fahrenheit, or 40 degrees in Celsius, since in my country we use the later. I’m used to the heat and drought throughout the whole year, not to these freezing temperatures and cloudy skies. The sky I’m used to is so bright and blue, and that’s the sky that I love so much, and luckily, the sky here looks like that, too, but not at this time of the year. This time of the year is so dark and gloomy… it feels as if the days are shorter and the sun is out less, the wind, chilling, howls like a pack of hungry wolves every night, and it knocks in my bedroom window so viciously that it feels like the sky is tumbling. The stormy black clouds cover the face of the sun at the times where it’s meant to be displaying all its majesty, they darken our days and block the heat from entering the atmosphere. They seek to block life from flourishing.

I planted these sunflowers to be a shining star of my own during a time where I cannot see the real sun. I want to see the colors of the sky and nature, of forests and rivers, of yellow, and green, and brown, whenever the sunflowers bloom. I want them to absorb the energy of the sun and share it with me, so that I can cheer up a little, so that I can be happier during the worst times of the year. I want them to paint over the gray filter that life is in right now, I want them to paint it with crayons, and markers, and pencils, and ink. I want them to make a beautiful mess of colors out of the blank slate that winter means to me. 

Thus, the idea of parting ways with my brave little sunflowers is hard to accept, and that’s why I want them to bring happiness to this world for as long as they can. And speak of that, I was very scared that my little ones would not survive the freeze that we had a couple of weeks ago. My bedroom window, frozen, could not stop the sub-zero temperatures from ice and snow entering my room. It proved too hostile, and while the dull white color of the snow slowly but surely absorbed the life of everything that was once green and pure, I only worried about the young seedlings that would surely not be able to sustain the terrible conditions. With no electricity, I could not provide any heat to my flowers for four days, which felt agonizing to me, since it felt as if I’d just begun to take good care of them. They appeared weaker each of those day, to the point where I was unsure if watering them was even worth it, since they would likely die on me anyway. I did not mind starting over, especially since it would become a thousand times easier to grow flowers after winter, but to me it just felt disappointing, as it I had just failed my flowers as a caregiver. I did not want that, I expected better of myself. I know I cannot control the weather, or electricity, or a lot of things for that matter, I know that. I know that there are a lot of factors out my reach, and no one expected the state to freeze and affect our lives that bad. But then I saw something that took me off guard: more and more seedlings were sprouting, and they were growing at an abnormally high speed. The first day I realized that more seedlings were growing, they were nearly a centimeter tall, but by the day that I recovered power and could provide more warmth to my flowers, they grew to nearly six centimeters tall! It was as if they were fighting back, as if it were their way of saying that their life would persevere through odds that were stacked against them. Man, that inspired me. I want to be like my little sunflowers, and not give up on myself even if everyone around me has given up. I have to grow and mature and learn, and I have to love myself so that words will not knock me down ever again. 

To me, watching these tiny plants grow made me not mind the loss of power, or having to sleep with three blankets, or having to be stuck at home with no contact to the outside world. I did not mind anything at all, I only felt excitement. It was then that I realized that in a way, the life cycle of a flower is too similar to that of a human being. We are all born in a world that is intimidating and is grander than us, a world that is unforgiving, that nowadays is seemingly on the verge of collapsing, but like a tiny being that manages to survive a winter storm, the strongest of our kind brute force their way into life despite harsh circumstances – we find water in the desert, refuge from the downpour, shadow in the burning sun, and light in the blackness of the night. Some of us perish at our peaks, and some of us wait just a little longer before fully withering away, with the only things that we leave behind are the love and joy that we were able to spread during our short lives. And I think that is beautiful. To live for the sake of living, for the sake of seeing the sunshine through the blinds one more time, or for having another chance at life. 

Growing flowers had transcended gardening as a hobby, and became something of my own: something that I just want to do, something that just feels right to me. I want to preserve them for their beauty that brings me so much joy, and the colors that paint over the sky, land, and walls. 

As such, as soon as the roads cleared up, my mind was set: I want to make more life happen around me. I want flowers, trees, veggies, fruits, and I want those hot pink flamingo statues that apparently are popular garden decorations. Thus, I went to my local garden center to purchase lots and lots of seeds. Lavender, pumpkin, yellow squash, watermelon, cucumber, tomatoes, roses, and of course, more sunflowers. I want to plant many greens all over my garden and see a colorful scenery whenever I enter my house, and I want to bid them farewell on my way out. I want the dull red bricks from my house to stand out among the dull red brick houses in my neighborhood, with a flourishing jungle of colors front to back! 

I imagine a future where the greenery of multiple plants and flowers add color to walls painted with different shades of gray and white. Where their leaves tangle around pots and windows, and dance as they are being watered, and listen to the sweetest hip hop and jazz that I can think of. On the same note, maybe it is okay for life to lose its color during the winter, so long as I find a way to paint the scenery myself with the colors of nature, and the next time that the sun hides behind grey clouds, it will be okay, because I will have anywhere from eight to twenty little brave sunflowers shining their brightest on my bedroom window, right besides my bed and my plushies. I imagine a future that will come in a few weeks, where my little sunflowers bloom and I can finally witness the birth of life that I nourished and made possible with love, care, and patience. 

Growing flowers has made me more connected to nature despite living a suburban lifestyle, where I see nothing but gray concrete making the shape of gas stations and stores, and black pavement leading me to nowhere in particular. I’m creating new and refreshing life that’ll spread the aromas of home and the feelings of joy – flowers that’ll grow ever taller to reach for the sun! They won’t melt or burn; they’ll become a star of their own. 

Stuck by Cynthia Hernandez

I am Proud of Myself by: Ada Rodriguez, Photography, 2020

Stuck

Two weeks. Two weeks in a mental facility. Two weeks doesn’t feel like a long time when you are constantly being occupied. I still have on the yellow socks they give you when you first come in, the ones with the rubber pattern on the bottom. I remember telling my sister before I left that they were my ‘spiderman socks,’ because they’re grippy. I’m out, a changed person? Hopefully. The past few weeks have been filled with activities designed to get my mind off of things. With that and the help of medication they deemed me fit to leave the facility. I should feel happier… right? 

I get home and my mom starts cooking my favorite dinner–entomatadas. Tortillas covered in tomato sauce filled with cheese and rice and beans on the side, my favorite family meal for as long as i can remember. I realize she’s making me this dinner to make me feel more at home. I can feel the tension. The wantingness of avoiding the conversation of me almost committing suicide just two weeks ago.

“Sientate a comer!”(sit down and eat) she yells from the kitchen. I had been laying in my bed, reading text messages from close friends asking me how I was doing. “I’m great,” I typed. That was a lie. It was a lie then, and it’s a lie now. How do they think I feel? I’m 19 and just got out of a mental facility. Do they think I spent this time in Disney World? 

I sit down to eat.

“No phones at the table Victoria.” I set my phone down realizing I got a text from my boyfriend. “Maybe we should just take you out,” he says. “Anywhere but Galveston, I hate the water there,” I chuckle as I type, we always joke about the water, how it reminded us of chocolate milk. “Let’s go to Austin,” he says. Austin has been on my bucket list for some time, I wanted to go see the hype my sister talked about. Unfortunately since i was 19 i wasn’t allowed on 6th street, a street full of bars and clubs. Still there were some cool spots I wanted to see, like the graffiti wall. “I’m down,” i type as I drop my plate in the dishwasher. 

We leave my house at 8. I kiss my mom goodbye and assure her I’ll be fine. She watches as we drive away.

“Can you text Maddie and let her know we’re here?” my boyfriend says. I text her and she comes out with a huge smile and a cupcake with a candle lit up.

“Get out of the car, how did you think we’d forget?” she exclaims. I had forgotten it was my birthday last week. They celebrated it at the hospital. A piece of  paper with a balloon on it that said happy birthday from my roommate taped to the wall. We weren’t allowed a lot of things, balloons with strings was one of them.

“Thanks Madd,” I say as I blow out the candle. She gets in the car. 

As we get to Austin, I begin to admire the scenery, how the roads go up and down unlike in Houston. I always think about moving out, dropping everything and just traveling. I’m sure a lot of people my age think about that a lot, but here I am taking a road trip with my best friends. The car starts to slow down and my boyfriend pulls over.

“Oh no, not again,” he says.

“Again?” I say. He gets out of the car, opens the hood of his car and smoke comes out. He comes back into the driver’s seat angry. “Im not going to let this ruin you day, pass me the water bottle. It’s just overheating.” I pass my water bottle to him and he goes and pours water over everything under the hood. “We’ll figure it out when we get back home,” he says.

“Whatever you say, captain,” Maddie exclaims. 

I have personally always hated how suicide was a subject that is hardly talked about. Mental health really. If the flu is a systemic virus that kills millions, why not mental illnesses? Is the brain not a systemic part of the body? What’s crazier is that a 19 year old like me can suffer from it. Depression. Just two weeks ago i hated how my life was going, and all people would tell me is that i had nothing to worry about because I was young and life was only going to get harder from here on out. Pretty harsh if you ask me. You can’t talk to people that way. No one goes through life the same way, and it’s easy to put up the facade that everything is ok when it isn’t, and it isn’t. It just sucks less. It is better than how i was two weeks ago, and that’s all that matters. 

On our way back home the car  breaks down and I try to call some friends to see if they’re willing to come help us. No answers. I assume it’s because we’re young and what parent would let their 17-19 year old child drive to Austin. Since no friends picked up the phone I thought of family I could call to come help. I think about calling my parents but they would just yell at me and lecture me. My brother doesn’t pick up. I call my sister Cynthia. She always picks up. She says she always answers my calls because she thinks it’s going to be one of my friends on the other line explaining that I got into trouble somehow and that they need her to bail me out. Thats funny.

“Are you serious? I just got off work at 11:30 p.m. Why were y’all even in Austin this late? Do you not think of the consequences? How were y’all supposed to get home if i hadn’t picked up the phone? You need to think about these things–” her voice fades. I sat there thinking about what I would be missing right now had I taken my life. I wouldn’t be graduating tomorrow, my friends would remember that for the rest of their lives, my parents wouldn’t see their daughter walk across the stage, they would miss my wedding, and I sure enough wouldn’t be here with my friends who love and support me.  I become overwhelmed with emotions as I hang up. My sister doesn’t understand, no one does. I needed this, I needed to get away. It’s impossible to get away from your own mind but at least you can physically go somewhere to have a change of scenery. When you hit rock bottom, there’s nowhere to go but up. Maybe I left the facility too early, maybe I should have stayed longer, gotten better and stopped prioritizing others before myself. Two weeks. Two weeks isn’t a long time. 

grounded by Jules Cyano

Near the Underpass of 290 & Barker Cypress by: Jules Cyano, Digital Painting, 2020

grounded

               up here i can see the sun &                                            the dark clouds  
                which hang over cypress                           are a distant memory
         200 miles up                       and my internal pressure
threatens to make
                   the pink & grey slimy things
                                           wet & slippery
            burst through my                   ears, ripping my
                              eardrums with
                                                                     a decisive pop-pop,        out of my nose,
                                                                                  like a violent
                                                                                                 sneeze gone wrong,
                                                                                  until my eyes
               burst, sucked out
into the vastness             as i climb
even higher. in the shape
               of the north star, i fall
                             upwards,
                                           consumed.

underneath, i feel small. compressed. the wounds of the world like 15

 

thousand pounds per square inch in the mariana trench. face up, glassy

 

eyed, but only darkness and shades of saturated  shadow. the words so close


together with a clashing sound it could blot out the entire sun like the 


nearly seven miles above me. instead of leaking out, it threatens to rush in


like the memories 
flooding back. it seems i have found my old treasure chest,


all its contents still locked inside, waiting for a better day to return to the


surface. nevermind. perhaps i should stay here, in the 
dark, perhaps this

worn and battered box can provide some cold comfort, its sides more rigid than my ribs, its lock more sturdy than my spine.

99 Matches by Nour Nimer

Road to Nowhere by: Julia Espino, Charcoal, 2020

99 Matches


I stop,
and a trail of 99 black matches followed.


At the sight of you, my hands shelter the little candle between my palms.


You sport the sun on your shoulders, but you’re etched with a darkness that rivals the night.


Still, you could give me what many cannot:
a warmth that asks for nothing in return


I speak: “Share your sun with me?”


You seethe: “Is your candle not enough?”

I never got the warmth of your sun, but I felt the heat of your anger.

The fire in your spiteful heart left me burned and blistered.

The ice in your narrowed eyes left me frozen in fear.

The weight of your sharp tongue left me with fallen spirits.

But my little candle still flickered, and you were still furious.

You pinched the flames with your fingers, and we both watched it breathe out a string of smoke.

Soon, you left with a scowl, but your sun stayed to glare at me.

Standing beneath it, I felt nothing but cold.

I was reminded:
The brightest lights cast the darkest shadows.

But I will always follow the sun, even if I melt into its shadows.
Because the outlines of darkness speak more to the lengths of its golden rays.

I remind myself:
Burns will heal
Ice will thaw
Spirits will rise.

Before my feet, sat a lonely match. I wouldn’t have seen it without your sun.


The match sparked, breathing flames into the wick of my little candle.
The fire shimmered, as did I.


I sat my little candle in the palm of my open hands and the fire pointed north,


So, I walked,
and a trail of 100 black matches followed.

The Garden by Zach Murphy

Ravine by: Felix Duque, Photography, 2020

The Garden

The wildflowers wilt over their own feet as I trudge through the dusty, jaded soil. One of my legs is broken. My mouth is parched. And my stripes burn. 

I wonder if the workers before me dealt with this kind of heat. I wonder if the workers after me will suffer even more. I wonder if there will even be workers after me. 

The honey isn’t so sweet here anymore. The dream has melted away. This planet is no longer my garden.

As I use my last shred of will to drive my stinger into the wrinkled ground, I pray that my final moments will be graced with a cool breeze.

Unmoved by Loveline Djamda

The Fallen King by: Matthew Woods, Pen and Ink on Illustration Board, 2020

Unmoved 

For he has vowed to protect at all cost,
As solid rock remains unmoved the wind. 
White as a pit from pole to pole, 
His undiluted heart is a spotless mirror. 
As fire when thrown into water is cooled down, 
His deception has brought him nothing but regrets. 
But in the thin clutch of any circumstances, 
His soul remains untouchable. 
Beyond the tears of the shades, 
Looms a man’s greatest strength.
And as he walks past his enemies,
He knows the moon is a friend too lonesome to talk to.
For he knows nothing but to protect,
Fearless like a lion.
But deviant like a true hero,
There’s no other path that leads to righteousness.

Apocalypse Alone by Nicolas De La Guardia


Abandoned by: Jorge Covarrubias, Photography, 2020

Apocalypse Alone

It all happened so fast. One second everything was business as usual and the next was utter chaos. I still remember it like it was yesterday: it was 3am and I was on break from stocking the shelves of Walmart. It was dead. I grabbed a cup of terrible coffee and watched the news. The ground shook: a complete shock to someone who had never experienced an earthquake. Not long after, the deafening screech of emergency services took over my phone and the T.V. It was a stay at home order. I silenced the alarm on my phone and scrolled through my phone on various websites to see what was really going on. I saw a grainy video from someone’s balcony. The ground shook but something caused it. The street cracked and gave way to a titanic mole cricket. It looked almost demonic: tan and red coloration, almost an amalgamation of other insects, round head, pitch dark eyes, and large hind legs with powerful and spiny forelegs crushing everything that stood in front of it. Once it got to the surface it was about the size of a bus, and it was hungry. It took seconds. It jolted over to the nearest car, striking it with its claw-like appendage and tearing into the petrified driver. The video then turned to the hole in which the monster cricket first emerged. The area around the hole was shifting as dozens of those titan crickets burst through the ground. The cameraman turned around and bolted. Definitely not my first hope for an apocalypse, but I’d take anything at this point. I ran out of the break room and straight to the back, grabbing snacks on my way there. I picked up my bag and called my friend David. I hopped on my bike; I needed to get home. A grin slowly came over my face. 

The phone rang; no answer. I called again; no answer. By the third time, a groggy voice on the other line answered. 

“Dude, I told you not to call me just because you’re bored at work let me sleep.”

“That’s not why I’m calling. It’s happening my man. I wasn’t exactly right but it’s finally happening.”

“What are you on about?” 

“It’s the end of the world baby!” I couldn’t keep my cool. The end of the world was always such a cool thought all the rules go out the window. Everyone would laugh and think I was crazy. I told them all to prepare and get ready something was going to happen. Not one listened. Slowly I just stopped talking about it with the people around me. They figured it was just a phase that I’d eventually get over it but that was never the case. I let them sit and work themselves away in a world I knew wouldn’t last. Giant crazy bugs not my first guess I was thinking zombies or a crazy disease either way I had a plan. 

“How do you know that?” David says to snap me back.

“You didn’t see all the warnings and weird videos on the internet of these HUGE bugs and tearing shit up all over the place.” 

“What is this, “the giant spider invasion”? Come on man, how am I supposed to believe that?”

“Trust me dude this time I’m absolutely positive. I saw a dude get torn to shreds. These things are massive and apparently not very nice. If you don’t believe me at least hop on the internet and get ready. Do you still have that bug out bag I gave you?”

“Ugh fine. If you are so adamant about it, let me throw some clothes on–and yeah I have it somewhere, let me dig it out.”

I had known David for as long as I can remember. His mom and my mom worked together at Greenhorn Elementary School. My mom knew I was kinda the odd one out, and as an only child, David was the brother I never had. He was always supportive but never indulged me when I would get super into my own head. 

I finally got to my home and the ground shook again with a little more force than last time. I was barely able to stay upright, but the house seemed fine. I opened the door and dash to the back where my room was. I grabbed my bug out bag. It’s got everything you’d need: emergency food, a waterproof fire starter, electrolyte water, cold steel G.I Tanto, first aid kit, a 5000 lumen flashlight, and thermal blankets. It was a little heavier than I remembered, but no time for complaining now. I strapped it on and started pedaling over to David’s just a couple blocks away. I got there and all the lights are off. I hoped he didn’t just ignore me and go back to bed. I pounded on the door. David answered after a minute or two.

“These earthquakes knocked out my power.” David answered as if he already knew my question. 

“Figured as much. Do you have the bag?”

“Yeah I tossed it on the couch. Also, where is your mom? Why are we leaving?”

“The giant bugs dude, I already told you. Here, watch this. My mom is still at home. I don’t think she’ll listen to me anyway.” I hand him my phone with the same grainy video. He watches silently. His eyes widen as the video continues to play. 

“You really weren’t joking about giant bugs. That thing is enormous and that’s what’s causing all these earthquakes.” 

“You saw how quick they are too so we need to go stay on the move and if they can tear through the ground like nothing and cars like aluminum foil. I don’t think we stay in our houses. If they collapse it’s all over.”

“We have to go get your mom first.” David’s reply was quick and forceful. I was quiet, my eyes shifted towards the ground. 

“She’s your mom and if I tell her it’s serious she’ll listen. I’ll go get my mom, we will drive over there in just a minute.” David always sounded so calm but there was something a little off about his voice. I think he was sacred. 

David and his mom walked out with some bags. David had the kit I made for him and his mom had a school backpack with clothes. She always had when she would chaperone field trips when we were young. They threw their bags in the trunk of the blue sedan. David hopped in the driver seat. His mom, who looked dead on her feet, crashed down in the back seat. I hop in the passenger side with my bag still attached. 

“What about your bike?” David asked as we pulled out of the driveway. 

“I’ll come back and get it, but I don’t think I’ll need it.” 

He started driving and the ground began to tremble. It was much worse now than before. I look in the rearview mirror and I see the street bubble up before bursting rocks and dirt sent flying through the air. 

“Go, go, go!” I screamed and hit David’s arm as the rocks and debris rained down on the street and car. The chitter of the creature was distinct, similar to a constant low clicking sound. We nearly blasted past my home, stopping a clear half-house away. David’s breathing was heavy, his eyes on the mirror. 

“Go inside go get her so we can go. Hurry!” David barked, his voice starting to shake. 

I swung open the car door and tried to open the front door, but it was locked. I fumbled with my keys, my hands trembling, and finally got it open. I took a few steps into my home and again the ground shook just like the first time I saw it: the ground exploding outwards followed by this monstrosity; its spiny forelegs ripping through the concrete, its face and chittering mandible and pitch dark eyes separated by segments. The sound of it is burned into my memories. Its speed astonished me. I watched over my shoulder, catching one small glimpse of David’s face for the final time. The walking nightmare took no time to shred through David’s blue sedan and I just couldn’t watch anymore. My eyes went forward and I never looked back. I ran through my house, out the back door, and hopped over my fence. 

I thought it’d be cool to live in the apocalypse. I never realized how sad it really is. How lonely it can really be and just how powerless it would make me. Next month it’ll be the one year anniversary of when the bugs came and the world ended. I may be alive, but this is reality: I have to fear for my life every day. I haven’t slept well in all this time, and neither the nightmares nor memories have been kind. I look over, seeing the shambles of where I’ve grown up. I’ve prepared for a long time, but I didn’t imagine I’d be alone in all this.

Here Lies 2020 by Brady Neal


Empty by: Jonathan Sencion, Photography, 2018

 

Here Lies 2020

Here lies 2020
To all the regrets we never got to solve
The trips we never took
And the friends we can’t see
The masks have returned no longer beaked and dark
No longer just for the doctors either 
But they still have the same meaning as then 
Death
Maybe not now, maybe not you, but people dying all the same 
Those plague rats are back as well
Refusing to wear masks and spreading the disease 

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