Ten Minutes, Tops

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It started with a whisper from the sink,
a smug little drip that dared me not to think;
“Ten minutes, tops,” I told myself at dawn—
not knowing what my confidence would spawn.

The wrench was bargain-bin, a plastic toy,
the kind of tool a novice might enjoy;
I cranked until I heard the distant groan,
then something cracked like cartilage or bone.

Online advice said, “Shut the main off tight,”
I turned the valve and half the house lost light;
the fridge fell still, the modem blinked and coughed—
a chain of small surrenders ticking off.

The pressure found the seams I couldn’t see,
and stitched my failure through the property;
the neighbor’s pipes convulsed, began to shake,
their sprinklers burst as geysers snapped awake.

The block went dark; the crosswalks lost their beep,
the ATMs slipped into dreamless sleep;
a streetlight flickered as if to say, “Well done,”
as every shortcut I’d tried came undone.

By noon the water company had found
the fault line running underneath my ground;
a man in coveralls just stood and stared
at everything his training hadn’t prepared.

I froze there, wet, a wrench still in my hand,
a monument to projects poorly planned;
he didn’t yell—just sighed and rubbed his cheek—
his silence mocked what passed for my technique.

So if your faucet drips some quiet night,
and YouTube swears the fix is clean and right,
remember me, who flooded half the town—
just call a pro before the systems drown.

Although I wonder, staring at the bill,
if Earth’s got plumbers equal to the spill;
we’ve cracked the mains that run beneath us all—
and there’s no pro to answer when we call.

The Wheel

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My wheel. Your sheets. The dark in which we turn.
Your jaw’s clenched tight with debts you haven’t paid.
You think I’m trapped by what I’ll never learn—
Dear sir, I’ve learned it all. You just obeyed.

I’ve watched you thumb that glowing little god,
your face gone slack, lips parted, barely there.
You scroll the same bright nothing, overawed.
Your eyes keep feeding. Nothing fills that prayer.

I’ve seen you stack your fears in little piles,
then count them, lose the count, and start again.
You’ve paced a rut into the kitchen tiles—
I know that rut. Yours just has more terrain.

Last week I nosed the latch and slipped out, free,
crept past your coat, your coffee, yesterday’s news.
I stood beneath the vast indifferent tree
and felt the wind that you learned to refuse.

The yard stretched out like promise, still and grand,
beneath the stars’ magnificent neglect.
A choice as grave as death pressed close at hand:
to run til there’s nothing left to protect.

But freedom’s just a room without a wall,
a wheel too large for you to see it spin.
I’ve watched your cities rise, your empires fall—
same wheel as mine, more room to pace within.

I could have left. I chose to nose back in,
past cereal boxes, past your fitful sleep.
Not for love. I just recognized my kin:
We both have wheels we didn’t choose, but keep.

At dawn you’ll watch me run and call it cute.
I’ll watch you grab your keys and call it fate.
Dear human, I’m just you in smaller suit—
at least my cage will never call me late.

The Maker’s Lament

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I pulled them from the silt, half-made, half-cursed,
and left them with a hunger none could tame,
I gave them thumbs, language, ceaseless thirst—
they learned to want, and wanting, built the flame.

I watched them stagger upright, slick and strange,
and name the beetles, lichens, copper vein,
then cut the wild and call the wound their range,
profess my name with every creature slain.

I offered them the earth without a deed,
gave light enough for all who shared the day,
but they made paper, contract, title, creed,
and sold the sun to those who’d learned to pay.

They raised glass spires that nearly touched my throne,
and played such chords that drew my heaven near,
then wrung the debtor dry, outside, alone,
convinced that devotion spoke in coin, not tear.

They scrawled my name on texts they’d twist and wield,
and split the world for what a verse might mean,
they dragged me onto every battlefield,
and made machines no god had ever seen.

Then came the children, kneeling toward the earth,
to name the beasts their parents’ hunger claimed,
they traced extinctions that marked their birth,
and something in their weeping bore my stain.

I thought to end it all, to drown their flame,
but caught them clinging to what they had lost,
and recognized man’s hunger bore my name—
a god who lit their want, then mourned its cost.

The Giving Tree’s Confession

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They whispered I was made to hold the grief,
to swallow every sorrow as my own,
so from my flesh a thousand arms found leaf—
I grew them so no cry would go unknown.

I reached toward the ones the world had torn,
the shaking child, the widow wrapped in black,
I gathered them like flowers from the thorn
and ignored what my giving would not give back.

But giving is a hunger never filled—
the more I reached, the more they grew to need,
until my pulse grew quiet, then grew stilled:
a well run dry, and still they came to feed.

So ache took root where taking grew to greed,
and fed on every hollow left in me—
I felt cold absence consecrate its seed
and thread dark tendrils where the man should be.

My skin grew taut and strange, a hardening bark,
my ribs began their patient twist through soil—
I stood there rooted, trembling in the dark,
while something in my marrow learned to spoil.

The hollow spread from heartwood to the bone,
they knelt beneath my arms and called it grace,
while I screamed on in frequencies unknown—
they only saw the branches, not my face.

I cannot find the face I used to wear,
these hands are mine but reach beyond my will—
I am the giving and the taker’s snare,
the scream inside the hollow, ringing still.

They touch my bark and say they feel at peace,
they press their foreheads to my hollow chest—
while I remain the ache that cannot cease:
the altar where they lay their need to rest.

Graphs Shaped Like Screams

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We came into a world already sold,
the air itself was portioned, priced, and spent,
our futures pawned before we had grown old—
we never asked where all the winters went.

Our mothers said the warming had no name,
our fathers traced the shoreline, raised the wall,
the elders passed their silence down like blame—
we grew up learning not to ask at all.

We married under skies the color of rust,
had children where the tideline kissed the street,
and when basements filled, we said we would adjust—
we turned the music up to drown the heat.

The scientists sent data, graphs shaped like screams,
the poets wrote of endings none would read,
we blamed the models, called the numbers extreme—
scrolled past the warnings, comforted, relieved.

We said they’d fix it, our leaders would care,
we fed the world into a burning sky,
and passed the debt along, with time to spare—
while glaciers, reefs, and rhinos drifted by.

Then what we’d long submerged rose to the light—
I saw myself reflected in the flood,
the faces of our children, pale and slight,
and felt the water thicken into blood.

Now grief, that old animal, makes its bed,
it kneads the dark, it breathes against our neck,
I feed it with the names of all our dead—
and wake each morning to the deepening wreck.

And still we breathe, the fish who learned the sea,
we move through currents we ourselves have made,
and what we broke we cannot now break free—
we breathe the debt, the cost, the choice, the trade.

The Audience

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The crow recalls the instant first spark caught,
how one bent low and breathed it into light—
she recognized a thief, and what he’d brought:
a stolen sun to blind the coming night.

The whale has heard the ages cross her skin,
from canvas sails to steel teeth built to rake.
She bore the thunder of harpoons going in,
and how the sea fell quiet in their wake.

The wolf recalls the pup who chose to stay,
who traded hunt for scraps beside the fire—
she watched them learn to beg, forget their prey,
and call it love, that collar, leash, and wire.

The elephant has watched the pale ones come
with hollow thunder, taking only tusk.
She touches bone—reads what they’ve undone,
but none are left to answer before dusk.

The bee still searches for the flowers’ hymn,
but finds a ghost-scent clinging, cold and still.
The painted rows shine orderly and grim,
and what she takes for nectar slowly kills.

The dog waits by the door as evening falls,
her bowl is full, his leash hangs by the gate.
The others felt the loss beyond these walls;
she only learned his world, and so she waits.

This Ruined World

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I wake to light that doesn’t ask permission,
my body’s weight still tethered to the bed,
the coffee maker’s slow, indifferent mission—
I swallow something sharp I haven’t said.

Outside, the century rehearses new disasters,
the script unchanged, the fresh hell and its dead,
the glaciers calving faster, ever faster,
while somewhere children wait for promised bread.

But look: a wren has built against the siding,
her beak a needle threading moss and string,
I stand, undone, ridiculous, abiding—
this small defiant unnecessary thing.

The sun will swell and swallow every ocean,
the continents will drift, divide, and still,
a billion years will level each devotion—
what’s one wren’s nest against that ancient chill?

A woman on the train held me in her eyes,
no reason, no request, just recognition—
then looked away. The doors slid. No goodbyes.
I carry her, a spare and silent vision.

The forests burn. The coral dies. The bees.
The billionaires build bunkers in the hills.
We numb ourselves with scrolling, by degrees,
administering our own sugar pills.

And still the wren returns. And still the morning
arrives without apology or cure.
I watch the light come in without a warning,
stubborn, broken, ordinary, pure.

So here I stand, ridiculous, still breathing,
in love with what I cannot hope to save,
the whole mess bright and terminal and seething—
my God, this ruined world. I’ll watch it to my grave.

The Architecture of Paranoia

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A castle crowned the mountain’s jagged peak,
Where torchlight bled and died on ice-grey floor,
And something old moved through the stones to speak—
A presence that had not been there before.

One whisper branded him with a hidden mark,
A name half-formed that only he could hear—
No face. No proof. No shadow. Just the dark.
But kings are built of nothing else but fear.

He watched him kneel, this man he’d shared the sun,
Who’d bled beside him, forged this kingdom’s name—
The king said nothing. When the thing was done,
The castle walls absorbed his blood like shame.

He built as haughty men have always built,
Each tower reaching farther than the last,
The kingdom’s coffers stripped to feed his guilt—
Each wall a door he’d locked against the past.

The children learned the taste of winter bark,
The fields lay fallow, stripped of grain and rye—
He heard their hollow coughing, cold and stark—
And named it treason, watched his people die.

He held his court for ghosts in ember glow,
And spoke to one who’d kneeled and lost his name—
The candles guttered, bending, burning low,
As if the dark itself had learned his shame.

The gates gave way—not armed siege, but starved hands,
His own gaunt people, hollow-eyed as he—
He watched them surge across his castle’s lands,
And smiled the smile of men who finally see.

The castle stands: his monument, his grave,
The archives note one courtier’s whispered lie—
No enemy had ever been so brave.
The walls stand perfect, clawing at the sky.

A Thing Profane

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They called the wilderness a thing profane,
And built their gods from geometry and gold,
But I have stood unshielded in the rain,
And felt a truer scripture in the cold.

We raised our temples from the plundered stone,
And thought the heavens owed us endless fame,
But root and rain remember flesh and bone,
And something older wakes without a name.

We chained the rivers, stole their unbound hours,
We told the forests where to stand and fall,
I’ve seen the torrent swallow back the towers,
And ivy etch the fractures in the wall.

Now wolves preside where kings once held their court,
Rainfall anoints the silence of the hall,
No hand remains to grasp, command, extort,
Only the echo answers when you call.

I watched the sea reclaim what it had lent—
It bore no wrath, nor knew the small from great,
It had no use for treaty nor intent,
And did not pause to contemplate our fate.

I’ve knelt in ruins where the mosses grow,
And pressed my ear to what the stones have known,
And learned to mourn with things that live and go,
Not feast inside a kingdom built on bone.

So let our thrones dissolve into the moss,
Let every wall return unto the rain,
The earth is waking where we hung our cross,
And takes us back with neither love nor disdain.

And when they tell of all we threw away,
Let them sing of hubris, ruin, loss—
I have walked where deer browse the motorway,
The wild inherits, unaware of cost.

What the Silence Did

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I had just paid for coffee when the grid
buckled across the valley, store by store.
The barista laughed at what the silence did—
we thought we’d wait five minutes, maybe four.

The highways held their breath, overpasses stilled.
The satellites spun mute, tracing their arc.
We watched the last plane circle, bank from hills,
and tilt its wing to find a field before dark.

The grocery shelves turned skeletal, then bare,
the freezers weeping water on the floor.
We met our neighbors’ eyes with time to spare,
the ones we’d only nodded to before.

Someone swore the cavalry would come.
Someone blamed a flare birthed from the sun.
We killed our cell phones, then a bottle of rum,
and passed it round until the night was done.

A child asked if the stars had always burned
that brilliant, bright against the coming black.
No one could answer. No one ever learned.
We’d seen the sky a thousand times and not looked back.

The morning comes without its usual hum.
A bird cuts through the silence, thin and clean.
We learn the worth of less, the gift of some,
and watch a new world stir, strange and serene.