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Helpless By Aaron M. Rudolph 3 a.m., a Tuesday Wrapped up in this strait-jacket blanket trying to keep the dark out. My hands grip hard to make the blanket a layer of skin. If I can keep tugging maybe noise will cease, maybe I can keep hurt away, even failure. Can't tell how I got here or why it's so important not to leave. Infants curl up in a fetal position because of instinct. I used to believe that crying was almost noble. Emotion is not about what happens outside. It's an impulse close to sneezing. It's just hitting me about security blankets and maybe I'm not close to having grown up. Most nights I walk outside to look at the stars because I think I'm supposed to and most nights the sky is empty except for the moon. I miss the stars because we use them to represent the future and hope. They just hang up there, nothing holding them in place. As a kid, I drew yellow stars over a black sky and added a bird or two so that there was movement in the world, company. My birds flapped their wings finding each other despite the dark. |
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Document last modified on: 11/11/2007