7/07 For those working and the busses that get them there. |
Like the sound of a thousand prizefighting angels dying on canvas, your work is not complete until you're home and safe from the stares of the streets. In lonely rides with lonelier people do you confide inside yourself the best ways to hide. A one in a crowd of ones; thinking allowed but saying nothing. Another bell rings as you slowly lose your wings and society turns to you another cheek you'd rather not see. Maybe then your iPod gets louder or your newspaper raised higher than the insolent prick supporting a family with crack terminology-laced homilies. And you think you're lonely but here you're never alone. A myriad of prototypical strangers; unique in heading to the same place fast. Everyone else's nowhere that you think you know, and your stop's already passed. Every reason, season or treason for miles gets lapped. If you sing out, in your head, you'll learn the words faster to what you swear was something you never said. Like "if I look at you the wrong way I'll end up dead, or worse, alive to explain myself poorly for what was better left at unread into by vicarious sex fiends, businessmen and mothers of bad trends." Clarity comes to those who never get home on time and have to leave a little of their life behind for the sake of being able to ride the train on anybody's dime. With the sound of a dozen or so prizefighting angels dying just to live on in the background of your day-to-day, "any-which-way-but-here, but-I'm-here" storyline, it quickly is etched as how your life's defined. You wouldn't have it any other way, you and your crowd of one-amongst-ones. Not so much, as long as you can know you're someone amongst the otherwise no ones. For all you know (but keep inside), they feel the same way too. |