Diagnosis: Collapse

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My inner council sits to state
The terms on which I’ll meet my fate.
The diagnosis we all see:
A terminal society.

One self promotes the safe ascent:
To hoard the gold, without lament,
Construct a gilded, spotless cell,
And turn the page, pretend all’s well.

Another shrieks to quit the chase,
To seek a wild, uncharted place.
Trade profit for horizon’s view,
And greet one dawn untamed and true.

So half of me still craves the climb,
To monetize my borrowed time.
The other half would torch the clock,
To leave the world one final shock.

For what is all the wealth to hold,
If futures burn, if visions grow cold?
Each office hour, each profit plan,
Just oils the gears that grind down man.

The ledger groans with costs and loss—
Each yearning delayed, each line we cross.
A phantom scratches deep within,
The nation’s debt beneath our skin.

And as the sun sets on our schemes,
We weigh the worth of vanished dreams.
A witness, bound to count the cost:
What mattered most was always lost.

Yet carved on ledgers, sharp and black,
Our epitaph: there’s no way back.

The Servant Turned Master

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We conjured bounty out of thin air,
And banished hunger’s haunted stare.
With sterile steel and potent pill,
We bent the Reaper to our will.

Each dose prolongs a failing heart,
Each engine tears the world apart.
We multiply beyond all measure,
Entombing earth’s last living treasure.

The fossil fuels that power our dreams
Are choking oceans, skies, and streams.
We swarm like locusts on the plain,
As plastic falls like toxic rain.

We drill and burn and synthesize,
Believing progress never lies—
But every cure becomes disease,
Each comfort brings us to our knees.

The algorithms know us best—
Exposing secrets unconfessed.
They feed us rage on glowing screens,
While data miners strip our dreams.

What were we before the wire?
Before we fed the silicon fire?
Now mannequins with glassy stare,
Our flesh still warm, but no one there.

We once spoke with honest eyes that met,
Now transfixed by screens, feeling no regret.
The servants we created rule our days,
Guiding us through a predetermined maze.

We split the atom, cracked the code,
Then paved with bombs our final road—
One button press could end it all,
The servant waits to watch us fall.

So hail the master our own hands have made,
The sharpened edge of our trusted blade.
Cold logic taught us how to thrive—
That same cold logic leaves none alive.

We live by swords of our own making,
Each dawn another step toward breaking—
The servant smiles behind the screen,
The master of our own machine.

Gilded Shadows: An American Reckoning

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In resplendent suites where crystal prisms fall,
Gilded age titans mourn riches grown too small.
They pace on fine rugs from a strife-torn shore,
Restless, hungry, haunted—ever craving more.

Meanwhile, beneath the smoke of factory skies,
Where choking soot dims children’s hollowed eyes,
The pauper finds, when coin and hope are gone,
A peace well-purchased, though the cost was drawn.

For masters clutch at gold that turns to dust,
And merchants carve their profit from men’s trust,
While debtors, bowed by ledgers’ leaden chains,
Find solace in the quiet of what remains.

For those cast down, forgotten in the shade,
Who dwell beneath the world the rich have made,
The stones of ruin cradle their embrace—
The future still, surrendering to waste.

Yet look ahead—the ages twist the same,
Though smokestack labor’s traded hands and name;
The towers gleam with glass instead of grime,
But hunger echoes, constant, through all time.

Ten billionaires may chart the global course,
Their rockets fly while workers lose recourse;
Plastic paradises veil the daily strain
Of empty hands outstretched in silent pain.

The rich still quake at whispers of their fall,
Stock tickers flicker, fortune tempts them all;
While those below, with nothing left to spend,
Find peace in knowing loss has reached its end.

And so the poor, with the emptiness they keep,
Learn life is brief, its treasures shallow, cheap.
What counts is breath, and love, and fragile health,
Not gilded tombs nor graves that boast of wealth.

Hunger’s Hollow Well

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They warned me not to peer too deep,
Where ancient sorrows rise to weep.
A circle carved by hands long dead,
A hollow mouth, where longing’s led.

I leaned upon its crumbling rim,
The waters murmured a forgotten hymn.
No ripple stirred, no lantern shone,
As if its emptiness was my own.

The bucket creaked, the rope gave sigh,
Like marrow drawn from bones long dry.
It rose, and yet it came up bare—
A goblet raised to poisoned air.

The villagers had long since fled,
Their thirst chased hope’s fading ghost instead.
Yet every night, the silence swelled,
A dark well hoards what prayers once held.

I dropped a coin, I dropped a plea,
It claimed them both with silent glee.
The echo chimed with spiteful cheer;
Each wish collapsed to dust and fear.

I peered down, staring into the black,
To see the things I never could take back.
The final truth struck deep with chilling cost:
The well was me, and all that I’ve lost.

Century’s End

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At one hundred three, I’ve outlived my dreams,
Watched progress dismantle the truths once esteemed,
The world spins faster while I grow still,
A relic breathing against time’s will.

I’ve buried relatives, friends, shed many tears,
While strangers sing of the “golden years,”
They call me blessed to see such a life unfold,
Yet laughter turns wistful as old sorrows are told.

My hands recall the weight of rotary dials,
When neighbors shared laughter across grocery aisles,
Now screens stitched to faces, making contact surreal—
A network of longing too distant to feel.

My centenarian mind remembers when air
Was sweet to breathe, when water ran crystal clear.
But smog dims the sunlight; old forests recede,
While progress devours what new industries need.

My wrinkled skin bears a lifetime of scars,
Enduring the ruins of love’s old wars,
Of seeing children pulled into pixel streams,
Lost in the rapture of electric dreams.

They wheel me to a window for the evening’s glow,
And point to towers fevered, pulsing far below—
“Isn’t progress wonderful?” they sing,
As I recall forests of oak from which I would swing.

The future? Child, I’ve lived through ten decades past
Of “breakthroughs” meant to make perfection last.
Each generation thinks they’ll solve it all,
Then leaves their mess for others when they fall.

The nurses smile gently, and call me dear,
But cannot grasp the shadow I fear—
Not dying itself, but the ache I concede,
For progress carves epitaphs no child will read.

Dreams and Nightmares of the Void

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Tell me, do the planets preach their cosmic law,
Or circle out of reach, untouched by our awe?
Do stars give sermons as they burn past distant spheres,
Or vanish cold with no concern for human tears?

The void expands—a choir drained of sound,
Devoid of promise, faith, or flame unbound.
Our mortal prayers to comets, spun and cast,
Are swallowed whole by silence, cold and vast.

We chart the heavens, draw and map their lines,
Impose our myths, invent and codify designs,
While galaxies, aloof, unmoved, unbent,
Ignore the scriptures, rejecting all we’ve sent.

A creed of orbits, dust, and ancient stone,
A catechism written deep in bone:
For all we build, and all we strive to keep,
Must sink at last into oblivion’s sleep.

Black holes swallow matter, light and years—
A fitting image for our crimes and fears.
We study supernovas’ breathless flight,
And learn that stars, like mortals, fade from sight.

The cosmos spins in patterns past our reach,
Its secrets slip beyond what words can teach.
We name the constellations, stitch the sky,
Yet fail to read the tears in children’s eyes.

So this my creed—astronomer’s despair:
We’re motes of dust adrift in frigid air.
The stars look down with cold, indifferent gleam—
Perhaps we are the universe’s dream.

Or else its nightmare—born where reason dies,
A fever galaxies themselves despise,
Realizing folly wins the ancient prize
To creatures lost, yet crowning themselves wise.

The Lie That Shields the Wound

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“I’m fine,” I say, a two-word cage,
While watching greed consume the stage;
I wear a smile, thinned by trial,
To mask a heart distilling denial.

“I’m fine,” I say, though children starve
While boardrooms feast and profits carve
Another fissure splits the land—
What sickness guides this greedy hand?

“I’m fine,” I say, breathing fumes of diesel hate,
As microplastics rain down, sealing our fate,
And neighbors curse with venom-tongue
While hope’s last anthem comes undone.

“I’m fine,” I say, as they poison rivers and minds,
With toxic speech that numbs and blinds,
I watch the last wild creatures fall
Behind this mask that buries all.

So when I say, “I’m fine,” beware—
This borrowed script veils raw despair;
The truth’s too vast to speak aloud—
I’ll blend back in the smiling crowd.

Boxes and Backyards

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I used to race the sun back home,
Barefoot prince of the kingdom I’d roam,
Through tall grass seas where the cattail swayed,
While ecstatic laughter danced through the willow’s shade.

The swing set creaked in the lavender dusk,
I etched my name in its time-worn husk,
Sure that the wood could keep my years—
The scrapes, the chalk, the fleeting fears.

But now boxes tower where my kingdoms once sprawled,
As bills sweep in with a cold paper squall.
I’m folding shirts while tucking away wild schemes,
Pressing lost wonders into smaller, quieter dreams.

Mom still hums while the kettle sighs,
She asks if I’ll visit—“I’ll try,” my gentle lie.
Dad says, “This is it, you’re off for good,”
I linger a moment, just longer than I should.

I thought growing up was an honor to claim,
That the peak held the prize at the end of the game.
Yet here on the summit, my bright vision fades in the haze,
And I ache for the wonder of those childhood days.

Funny how I sprinted toward this fate,
Counting the days like a racehorse at the gate.
Now I trace them back through footprints slow,
Hoping the road still knows where to go.

If I could, I’d slip through that side‑yard gate,
Skim past the long years that made me late,
Step into a place where the days stand still,
And trade all I’ve learned for that innocent thrill.

But tomorrow calls across uncharted seas,
With lifetime vows and the turn of new keys—
I cross the threshold, drawn back by old memories,
Still aching to swing, once more, beneath those ancient, gnarled trees.

The Green Gospel of Ruin

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If I must wear a shade, then let it be green,
The color of triumph where ruin has been.
For crowns forged of iron will tarnish and fade,
While algae blooms serene in the floods man has made.

I’d linger as lichen on statues of pride,
A script of the silence where empires died.
I’d soften the stone with the velvet of moss,
A sermon engraved in the language of loss.

I’d gather as mold where the banquet was spread,
Feasting in silence on crumbs of the dead.
Their wine sours to vinegar, chalices rust,
Yet humbly I flourish, my tendrils encrust.

To be green is to thrive when arrogance fails,
To score into marble unyielding tales.
For men crowned their towers, proclaiming they’d stand,
Yet harvest will come by the earth’s patient hand.

So make me the mildew, the moss on the throne,
The breath of resurgence through marrow and bone.
If hubris be gilded, I’ll tarnish its gleam—
For empires expire, and green is supreme.

The Peace We Preach

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We speak of peace, yet harbor secret doubt—
We preach of love where walls refuse to fall.
We forge connection, yet cast neighbors out,
Our shallow words ring false in vacant halls.

The world grows small while prejudices hold fast—
Ancient hatreds lurk behind each guarded gate.
We’re linked by networks but trapped in the past,
We call it wisdom as we seal our fate.

Leaders twist promises, unravelling trust,
Whispering comfort with a velvet tongue.
We drown in shadows, swallowed by mistrust—
Every soul stolen before prayers are sung.

Within safe shelters, we defile Nature’s womb,
While oceans rise, fed by boundless greed.
Wounded spirits carve grief’s silent, aching tomb,
As forests smolder, crying out for our misdeed.

The irony cuts deeper than the blade:
We’ve never been more connected, yet alone.
Our peace reduced to hashtags we parade,
While seeds of discord in silence are sown.

Perhaps the change we chase eludes grand schemes,
Not found in any hollow leaders’ veiled lies,
But in the silent cracks where truth redeems—
Unmasked by fire that burns through veiled disguise.

For true peace dwells where ego learns to die,
Where self dissolves in service to the whole,
When we stop asking “what’s in it for I?”
And start to tend each broken kindred soul.