A descriptive poem about an experience. |
The ocean was an open door. I sat on it’s carpet ten steps from the tide line. The breeze moved my hair like it moved the waves crested with white foam and crashing at my bare feet. The ocean invited. My fingers dug into the gray sand feeling for the warmth of the sun long disappeared beneath the waves. The ocean was black ink melding with a sky of onyx, both romancing the stars competing for which would reflect them more masterfully. The sky was distant but the ocean, The ocean I could touch. Like a magnet it drew me in. The warmth of the water surprised me as my body hit it the speed with which I ran dissapating in the force of the oncoming waves. I leapt to clear a mountain of water and pointing my arms over my head dove beneath the surface. I became a part of the black, completely immersed. I felt the water pressing on my skin and I wished I could breathe beneath it, know what it would feel like to inhale without choking, exhale without fainting. I stayed under, tossed aside by a wrestling wave. My human lungs, flawed in this world, this under-water world, screamed for air, and as if I had no control my head broke the surface my mouth opened and gulped in air. I opened my eyes. I was among stars. The land faded as I drifted further out and all that existed was the sky and the sea and the stars above and beneath. I imagined myself one of them, just a tiny white speck on the surface of the sea. It confirmed my existence. The ocean was an open door. I opened the door and entered the existence that alternates between heaven and earth and confuses the two. The existence that strips away everything besides the skin so that all is left is the naked human. This is existence is forgotten as soon as it is exited because it is not seen or recalled or encrypted upon the memory. It is only felt by the skin and bones that enter it. |