Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Danielle Williams – Goodnight and Goodbye

Goodnight and Goodbye
For all of our years of being so close to one another, I am not sad to say that I am happy to see you go.  Your endless torcher has made my life a living hell, and I look forward to having a life without you constantly breathing down my back and lurking around my bedroom.  I never understood how you were able to walk around without making even the slightest of noises considering how large you were.  It drove me crazy hearing you moving things around in the closet one minute, and the next you would be sitting behind my back on the bed.  I always knew when you were near because I would feel the blankets slightly being pressed into as they slowly creeped up to me, which always gave me shivers.  
You spent way too much time in the closet with the lights off, doing God knows what.  Hopefully nothing dirty.  I don’t want to find anything with a slimy consistency on any of my clothes.  Sometimes, I would even watch you come out of my closet as you slowly wrapped your hand around the doorframe with your long spidery fingers and perfectly pointed manicured nails.  It was almost as if you were trying to seduce me, but it creeped the heck out of me more than anything, especially because you weren’t the prettiest looking thing.
Your eyes were a yellow colour that I swear glowed in the dark.  I always knew where you were in a dark room because of them.  Not only was the colour disturbing, but the size of your eyes were pretty abnormal considering it looked like you struggled to shut your eyelids over them.  
Your figure however, was a whole different story.  You were far from the stick thin figure of a model and much closer to that of a hippo.  I think the reason that you smelt so bad was from the dirt and moistness under your many rolls of fat, but you’re breath could definitely challenge that statement. The fact that you didn’t shave was also quite horrifying to see because you did not have much of any hair, other than your legs and a few clumps on top of your freckled head.
My mom always told me to ignore you when you when I called her in the night complaining that you were keeping me up, but you made it impossible.  You would laugh and tease me when I turned the lights off and run to the bed to avoid being grabbed by anything else in the room, even though I knew you were the only one.  
I’m not sure when, or how our relationship started to change but over time, I knew you had less of an influence over me. Yes, I still knew you were around but somehow, it mattered less and less that you existed and I felt more indifferent to your presence. Now that I look back on our history, I believe this was the beginning of the end for you and me. After the many years of knowing you, your presence around my room started to matter less and I began to think of you as more of a distraction than an enemy. You started to drop by my house at night, only on occasion, but would never stay long.  Finally I made my mind up that you would no longer have any influence over me and frankly, if you came to my room I would simply ignore you. I no longer gave you any power over me physically or mentally. You were a nobody and I could stand up to you anytime I wanted.
My mom is so proud of me for telling you off.  Especially because I stopped peeing the bed once I did.  Mom says it’s because I’m fourteen now and fourteen year olds aren’t afraid of the Boogie Man.  

Let Go - Austin Dutcher

June 19, 1999
Dear Diary,
                Hi again, it’s me, Avril. Mom and dad are fighting again, and yes, they are fighting about me. Dad is trying to defend me saying that I’m just going through a phase and I’ll get over it, but mom says I’m worrying her too much to just wait for it to pass. They just don’t understand me. This is not a phase, it’s not something I’ve chosen to be, it’s who I am, I’m just too punk rock for them. I hope someday mom and dad will just accept me, for who I am like my friends do. If they don’t accept me, I don’t know what I’ll do. Maybe they wish I was dead, maybe if I just killed myself life would be easier on them. Maybe I should just run away, become a singer like I’ve always wanted and just get away from them for a while until they learn to understand me. Thanks again diary, you’re always there for me.

June 21, 1999
Dear Diary,
                I can’t sleep, it’s midnight and I just can’t sleep, mom and dad are still yelling about me, but this time it’s worse, they think that I should be sent to a guidance counsellor to help deal with this phase that I’m going through. Why can’t they just listen and understand and me for once in my god damn life. I don’t want to be normal like all the other girls that they want me to be like, I just want to be me, I just want to be Avril. I’m sitting here crying as I listen to them scream about me, I’m tearing their marriage apart, they never use to fight like this, not before I discovered this side of me. I just can’t stop crying, I’m sitting here writing in you but unlike regular times, it’s not helping take the pain away. I’m thinking maybe it’s time I try a new technique to take the pain away. That big sharp knife down in the kitchen seemed helpful, I’ve heard of other girls using them, maybe it will help me. Sorry to keep you up so late diary, but I just really needed someone to talk to, but now I think I’m going to go find that knife. Thanks again, love Avril.

June 26, 1999,
Dear Diary,
                I’ll keep this entry short and sweet; I used the knife the other day. I cut myself just a tiny bit of my arm, it hurt a lot, but it seemed to release a lot of the stress I had building up inside me. I decided to keep it locked away in my dresser next to you just in case I ever needed it again, it’s a good friend like you, it helps me a lot, so hopefully you two will get along and become the best of friends inside that little dresser drawer. Sadly I must go now, schools in an hour and moms yelling at me to “get my ass downstairs.” I think tomorrow I’m gonna talk to dad about become a musician though, so that’s some really good news, hopefully things go well, wish me luck. I love you Diary, thank you for always being there yet again.

 June 28, 1999
Dear Diary,
                Mom and Dad are going at it again, but this time they’re screaming about how I asked dad if I could drop out of school to become a musician. I don’t really see what the big deal is; a lot of musicians start at a young age, look at Britney Spears. She’s so pretty and popular and super feminine, I want to be the complete opposite. I’m not pretty like her and all the other girls that are classified as pretty, but I could be pretty in my own dark way, and I would be popular but more for the kids who are misunderstood, like I am. I have to make this dream come true. Why does everything have to be so complicated, because I’m really starting to lose my grip on life. My parents are just starting to make me feel so unwanted and like I should really just let go of the life they are giving me and start fresh. I’m gonna make this happen, I’m gonna be a star, and I’m gonna be the best damn thing that their eyes have ever seen. Thanks again diary, for always being here for me, I will report back to you in a few months, but for now, I have to get my life together and get this dream going.

September 29, 2001
Dear diary,
                I’m sorry it’s been so long since I’ve wrote in you, but I’ve got some big news, I ran away from home to become a rock star. I moved in with Aunt Lucile down in Manitoba, she is the one person in this whole fucked up family who actually understands me and realizes this isn’t just me trying to fit in with some crazy fad that’s going on. I love Auntie, she a club owner so she actually helped me book some gigs, as they call them, in her club to help build my resume. Oh yeah, and I didn’t even tell you the biggest surprise of all, on my birthday 2 days ago, she surprised me by bringing in a record executive in to one of my shows without telling me and I got signed! He’s the CEO of Arista Records; he believes I have a real interesting and different style and that I could be even bigger than Britney! How cool would that be! I could be living my dream by this time next year, and I owe it all to you. You’ve always believed in me and never put down my dreams unlike my parents. So thank you diary, but sadly I must leave you again, I don’t know if I told you this yet but I met a boy, he’s a cute sk8er boy, wish me luck, thanks again.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Marie Roy and Elisa Toner — Forgetful Gluttony



Marty-O and Elisa Toner

Mr.Breaton

EWC-4U

May 6th, 2013

Forgetful Gluttony

The April air was sharp, stinging my nostrils as I huffed my way up the hill. God, it was hot out. The sun was beating down on my neck, and suddenly I felt as naked as a newborn bird. Maybe I should buy a toupee or something so that my scalp didn't burn. While my skin was baking, I squinted around and looked for Lou. That bastard had to be around somewhere, but knowing him it would take an extra half hour to lug his fat ass up the hill. I glanced at my watch:  one o’clock. I sighed and plopped my aching bones down on the nearest bench. The wood was faded and fragile, and here and there were little splatters of bird shit. One of those emu kids with the black fingernails might have thought that was pretty cool, but I just felt annoyed at the park maintenance. Back in my day that would never have happened. Since Lou was nowhere to be seen, I pulled out a box of those Rosebuds. My wife would have told me to watch my blood sugar, but that woman could nag a shark out of water.
“Reginald!” I sent some of my Rosebuds flying, my hand as shaky as Michael J. Fox’s.
“Dammit, Lou! Don't go scaring me like that!”
“What, can't handle a little excitement?”
“Of course I can,” I lifted a Rosebud off the ground and popped it into my mouth. “It's just you I can't handle”
The bench sagged a little as Lou lowered himself next to me. “Hey, Reg,” He shoved a pudgy elbow into my arm, “Lay off the sweets.”
“Who are you, my wife?” I slid away from him. “Why don't you go sit with that little emu kid over there smoking the cigarette?”
“What? I don't see an emu!”
“No, not the bird, you know those kids with the greasy hair and the black nails.” Lou's forehead became a sea of wrinkles as he frowned.
“Huh?” He muttered something that I couldn't hear. What a jackass.
“What did you say?”
“Never mind.”
“Took you long enough to get here,” I pointed at the wet marks under his armpits, “I'd hate to be the cotton under those pits.”
“Well you couldn't go a damn minute without the chocolate.” I pulled the package close to my chest. I pointed a gnarled finger at Lou when a Frisbee whizzed by our faces. Luckily it missed us; my neck was so stiff I could barely move it.
“Some people's kids,” Lou said. “No damn respect.”
“They're all just attention starved” I said, popping a Rosebud into my mouth. “Their parents just give 'em a bunch of candy and stick them in front of the TV. I bet they all have rotten teeth.”
Lou picked at his dentures before jabbing his stubby finger at my cheek.




“What's that?” I leaned over and swiped my finger over the brown smear on his wrinkly skin. I placed my finger delicately in my mouth and let my tongue swirl around it.
“What?”
“Goddamn Reginald, it’s bad enough that you’re eating sweets but this tastes like crap. Ninety-nine percent cocoa, you can’t even call this chocolate. Plus you’re picking up my bad habits and saving the rest for later I see. Look, there’s chocolate all over your shirt!”
“Speaking of those emus,” Regie interrupted, “look at the geese in the pond over there!” Regie pointed in the complete wrong direction, obviously embarrassed of his mishap.
“Hey oh! You know I hate those demons with feathers. “Da hell is your problem man?”  I could feel the sweat creeping up from behind my neck, forming tiny wet blobs.
“What are you talking about Lou? You never tell me anything besides what meal you’re having at the Greasy Gravy.”
“You’re just as bitter as that chocolate you were chowing down earlier. And for your information dillweed, I only eat quality food from the Chill Grill.”
“Watch your language big boy”
“The only benefit of meeting you here at the park was the public access to the hotdog stand” I looked in the distance and steadily raised myself as my knees buckled.
In all honestly, I didn’t care for what that old lard had to say in return. My eyes were set on that shimmering silver cart that I’ve been eyeing all day.  The aroma of hot dogs was taunting me to come closer; I was seduced. Imagining what condiments I’d put on my food made my chin quiver with excitement. All was forgotten, I entered another dimension. I started thinking of how the delicious zest of ketchup would contrast with the blunt mustard on top of the roasting wiener. Oh what about relish you may ask? Nobody likes that green shit anyways.
“Are you going to move your ass or what? You’ve been standing in front of me nearly drooling on yourself for the past fifteen minutes. ” A man’s voice came out of nowhere, interrupting my thoughts.
“Excuse me sir, but you should be more polite with your elders.” I snapped back at him, walking towards the hotdog stand.
Who did this guy think he is? A scrawny old man sitting on the bench by himself holding an empty chocolate box, how pathetic. I wonder how he was able to stay so thin seeing as he left freaking chocolate pieces all over him. I thought those were brown polka dots on his shirt for God’s Sake. I hobbled away and headed over to a charming young man standing patiently at his work post.
“Top of the day to you sir, I’d love to buy a hotdog please. Preferably the juiciest one”
“Just one, it looks like you could use a few big fella,” The vendor flashed a friendly smile.
“I’ll stick with one for now, I’m supposed to be meeting a friend here in a little while anyways. Would you happen to have the time?”
“It’s quarter past one, have a great day!”
Shit. I was supposed to meet Reginald here at twelve thirty. I was positive I came early as well. I squinted my eyes due to the beaming sun and looked around the park. There was only the old man with the chocolate box sitting down in the distance. There’s no way that could be Regie, he had diabetes and knew better than to eat sweets.
Reginald had always been my best friend and it was nice to have someone to grow old with. Sadly I haven’t seen him in years. As I scarf down my hotdog without chewing I reached into my back pocket for my medication bottle. I knew I had to get home seeing as my medication wasn’t  in my pocket; I probably left them on the counter somewhere. These drugs are said to help delay or prevent Alzheimer symptoms from becoming worse for a limited time and may help control some behavioral symptoms. All I know is that I really hope to see Reginald soon.




I blinked a few times to get the sun of out my eyes. I could just barely make out the bulbous Lou stuffing a hot dog down his throat. And to think I was the one with the diabetes. Jesus. I figured that after Lou screamed at me, he had probably forgotten to take his meds. A few years ago, we used to laugh at all those 80 year old losers who had Alzheimer's, but this was different. I noticed a little girl staring at me, her eyes were round, almost like a fish.
“What are you looking at, guppy?”
She stared.
“Haven't you even seen a man with chocolate on his shirt?”
She blinked.
“Kids these days, so damn stupid their piss isn't even yellow.”
Then she started crying. Personally, I wasn't in any mood for the water works, and I didn't want to stick around in case some parent tried to call the manners police on me. I had about a minute to get out of there, and it would probably take me at least triple that to get my ass off the bench.
“Hey, Lou!” I hollered. “Lou!” He waddled around and faced me, a little bit of ketchup clinging to his lip.
“You've got a little schmutz right there.”
“Oh.”
“Are those wieners any good?”
“What?”
“Those over there.” Lou's eyes followed my finger, but my joints were a little crooked so he ended up looking at a group of boys playing baseball.
“Baseball?”
“No, not the boys you idiot! The dogs! I'm talking about the hotdogs!”
“Yeah the meat's pretty good.”
“Oh yeah? Are they frankfurters? I love those big beefy—”
“There's something on your shirt.” Lou could be a real dunce. He was always cutting me off. Like a man with ketchup on his upper lip had anything important to say.
“I know, they're called stripes.”
Lou shook his head. “Those dots.” He jabbed at my ribs.
“Ho! I'm not some damn doohickey that you can poke at! God, you're like one of those teenagers.” In my rage, I had dropped my box of Rosettes. I lifted the package off the ground and noticed it was eerily light. I peered inside, and saw nothing but white walls of cardboard.
“God dammit.” Shit I was out. Damn. I patted my pockets, maybe I had some spare change on me.
“Hey Lou, I've got to get going home soon.”
Lou stared at me through his milky eyes. He needed his cataracts redone.
“It was real nice meeting with you, but maybe next time you'll sweat less.”
“Maybe next time your shirt will be clean.”
“Oh, so you're a comedian now?” I looked down at my empty box again, it had more air in it than my pockets.
“Listen, Lou, I took the bus here,” I lied, “do you think I could borrow five bucks?”
“Well, I don't really know you.” I sighed. Of course you don't know me you idiot! You have Alzheimer’s. The funny thing about seniors with Alzheimer's is that they're the only people who have no idea there's something wrong with them.
“Sure you do, I bought you your hot dog.”
“Really?” he smiled, his chubby cheeks forcing his eyes into slits. “That's very—”
“So you'll give me some money?”
“Sure,” he put his fist in his pocket and came out with a crumpled bill.
“I'll pay you back one day.”
“Sure, old timer.” I had to laugh at that, even if he was senile, Lou was still himself.
“Thanks a million, fatty.” My hand closed around the bill and I walked so fast I thought my heart would burst. I was making off like a bandit! Five whole dollars. I could buy two boxes of Rosebuds. Maybe I was an 81 year old jerk for taking advantage of the elderly, but when you're old, you're bored, and a teenager would never give me money. At least Lou would forget about what an bastard I could be.

Briana Claus – By The Bottle

I’d hated him for years, ever since I was little and was able to comprehend my surroundings. The way he treated my mother was unacceptable. I’d watch how he would beat her and I knew eventually it would be me under those pounding fists. Every day after school I’d run up the stairs to my room and lock my door to avoid any confrontation I might have with him.
I remember there was one day I was sitting in my room and I heard him pull in the driveway; I imagined him sitting in his car concentrating his anger so he could focus it all onto my mother as soon he came through the door. A few minutes later I heard the door opening, then I heard yelling. Glass smashing. Feet stumbling. My mother begging him to stop, shouting “STOP! Please!”. I imagined the tears forming in her eyes as she tried to shield herself from the violence. Her crashing toward the floor. Banging. More begging. Then I heard him make his way up the stairs. I remember flinging the blanket over myself, trying to protect myself from the world and make him believe I was asleep. The door opened, followed by footsteps, then… a repetition of what happened downstairs.
After a few months this became a daily routine. I never had the strength to stand up for myself, and my mother was much too afraid of him to try to change anything. It was like clockwork.  3 PM: Return from school; 3:30 PM: Car pulls up in the driveway; 3:32 PM: Door opening; 3:35 PM: Yelling; 3:36 PM: Sounds of something in our house being thrown and broken; 3:40 PM: Footsteps on the stairs; 3:42 PM: My turn. Of course there were days where it varied, but this was basically the way things were.
My entire life had become one huge pool of violence and abuse. I would go to school and people would ask what happened to me; and I would lie and say that I fell down the stairs. Clumsy me, I’d shrug. I knew they never believed me. They could tell by the look in my eyes. The pleading. “Help me! Help me!” I wanted to shout. I knew I couldn’t. Nobody could do anything.
Even now I hear the shouting weaving its way through the walls of the house, through every nook and cranny, and through the vents. Looking at the clock I see it’s 3:00 AM. I never sleep anymore. The fear. The tears. The yelling. Tick, tock. Tick, tock. Tick, tock. My mind racing, analyzing the things I hear.
“You’re nothing. You’re nobody. You’re a useless piece of fucking shit! Nobody will ever love you. Even your daughters a screw up. You can’t do anything right.” He came home with a paper bag today. It’s not the liquid that does the damage, it’s the bottle.  Glass breaking, bottles smashing.  My mother falling to the floor.

My mother and I. We are the warriors, the strong, and the brave. We surpass each wave, each bombardment of pain. Pain given to us by those we thought we trusted. Trust broken and never regained.

Monday, June 10, 2013

Oh Baby, Kimberly Hatcher

Kimberly Hatcher
Mr.Breaton
EWC 4U
June 6 2013
Oh Baby!

I wiped my sweaty palms on the sides of my jeans and shifted my feet anxiously. The bus that had pulled up in front of me had caught me completely off guard. Not the fact that the bus was there, it was right on time, but what was on the bus itself was something extraordinary. When I saw her photo on the side of a bus, I was completely awestruck. Her body was unlike anything I had ever seen and blown up on the side of that vehicle it was almost impossible to take in all at once. I forced my jaw shut and wiped a string of drool that had escaped my gaping mouth. My face was flushed as I stumbled onto the bus, my mind still captivated by that photo. All of her parts were so public, that kind of exposure should have been illegal. Still, as I sat in the seat by the window, my mind couldn't help but wander. We had met a few times before, her photo conjured up the memories of evenings past. My heart swelled and I was determined to track her down. The evenings we had spent together had been among some of my most cherished memories. Clandestine encounters, our passion was shrouded by the moonlight and the darkness of the passenger seat in my car. Her warmth within my hands, her sweet kiss! I longed to experience it all over again. With a sense of renewed determination, I rose from my seat and got off at the next stop. Surely my love could not wait, I had to find her! I rushed through the crowded streets and pedestrians grumbled as I flew by them. What do you know about love? When I found myself in front of her building, that familiar brightly-lit structure, my heart fluttered. Is this right? Should I really do this again? My hesitation was momentary, and my hand flew to the handle. I swung the door open and inhaled deeply, the familiar scent engulfed my nostrils. But then, my heart ceased to flutter and felt as if it had simply stopped beating altogether. There she was, in all her curvaceous splendor; the perfect specimen. She deserved someone who could appreciate her until the very end. I was the only one who could do that. I thought I had seen perfection incarnate until that moment. But then as I began to enter the building, the wind was knocked out of me. A figure even more luscious than my previous love, dressed so beautifully, I felt a tear threaten to drip down my cheek. Her sister! How could it be? So alike, but so different. Both were beautiful in their own ways, both were hot-bodied temptresses begging me to spend the night! I stumbled forward and found myself being asked the question: Who did I choose? Who was the one that I wanted? I gripped the counter in front of me, and I felt a bead of sweat trail its way down my neck. I wiped my moist forehead with a shaky hand and stuttered something inaudible. It’s too soon! I’m not ready! I took a deep breath and gazed up above for some guidance, some insight into what the best choice would be. I exhaled, and closed my eyes for a brief moment hoping for Jesus to guide me, then said, “I’ll have the Big Mac combo please.”

Sunday, June 9, 2013

vee tarks ~ ♥ i don’t have to wear a bra if i don’t want to (but maybe it’s best that i do) ♥

i don’t have to wear a bra, if i don’t want to.  
but when they told me to unclasp and let the baby blue straps slip down skinny arms, i said, okay, and i let them go.
i wouldn't have dared to ask them if they had any sugar-coated goodies to show.
he said, you lost the game in the first place -- so this is what you have to do.

i was a preteen in a coma of my own doubt, a brain that had become a temple of strawberry mush and mirrored upskirts and hypothesized chemical imbalances.

maybe it’s best that i wear a bra for now.

i don’t have to wear a bra, if i don’t want to.
but in the middle of my chest there’s a garden of zits and blood bubbles, and the boys said while nudging one another, why do you have herpes on your boobs?
i mumble, i don’t have herpes on my boobs. when i walk away, i hide my blemished garden of hormonal mistakes.

the black scoop necks and the cherry bikinis are cut up and turned to rags, rags, rags, used to cleanse the floor of dog hair and dirt.

i cried in the 7/11 when i picked up the those barriers that you’ll say you use but you don’t, only because i kept saying no, no, no, it’s too early, i really shouldn't. if i was born with chafed lambskin instead of my own skin, then maybe i would've let you, because it would've hurt you at least half as much as it broke me.

i don’t have to wear bra, if i don’t want to.

but, by the swing sets where the children played with doting mothers and proud fathers, you grabbed me tight by the ribs, swung me behind the apple blossom tree and held my arms to my waist and said, shh, no one is going to see. no one is going to see when i jab your fingers into your eyes either, but i don’t tell you that.

for your birthday you said you wanted me instead of the cake i bought you with my own allowance with the periwinkle blue icing and strawberry crème filling. you’re my cake, he said, you’re my present. but i bought you cake. honey, but i didn’t ask for anything, all i want is you. when you pile your two-hundred pound colossity on my pink black and blue ribs, i can see the hunger in your one unpatched eye and i can smell your pungent pirate breath travel up my nostrils and tickle my brain lobes. if i hadn't sneezed in your rotten face, then maybe i wouldn't have kneed that one gift you have where it happens to hurt the most. i’m a sick girl, i tell you. i’m not sorry.

i don’t have to wear a bra, if i don’t want to.
but maybe it’s best that i do.

Steve Eyman

The Past


Happiness went as fast as it came,
Promises, feelings now hollow not sweet,
How could this be the last time we meet.
Familiar faces blurring into a crowd,
Darkness surrounding and crushing and growing,
Casting a shadow without anyone knowing.
A sight once brought laughter and cheer,
Replaced by an image of lost memories dear.
The Silence not silent,
The noise irrelevant.
Cruising through life with no hope for the future,
Running from the past,
No remedy ever lasts.
Eating away at one’s very soul,
Changing and moulding and destroying at will,
Deeper and deeper with intent to kill.
Not going down without a fight,
Our hero pushes back with all of their might.
The darkness starts lifting and fading away,
Images clearing a release from the haze.
The darkness replace by a hopeful light,
The powerful force now receding at last,
Waiting for it’s moment to relive the past.



The Ascent


Falling, falling, always falling,
The insatiable pit always calling,
Pulling down, down to the bottom,
In the darkness shadows crawling.

Bloody hands clawing, tired feet scrambling,
Thoughts are heavy, slurred voice rambling,
Energy fading, hope exhausted,
Deadly voices forever damning.


Will to climb escaping.
Hungry pit accepts its victim.


Stubborn climber continues ascending,
Onwards to unforeseeable ending,
Ignoring the pain, continues to struggle,
Chances are low, no room for pretending.


Light finally breaks onto the face,
New burst of strength to finish the race,
Worth the risk, worth the pain,
No longer the pit continues to chase.


Lungs burning,
Stomach churning,
Emerging from the ground,
Hope returning.


Gaze upon a brand new challenge,
Lofty peak far out of sight,
Bloody hands climb with all their might.



A Day in The Life


She loves you yeah, yeah, yeah,
Keep moving forward and stop looking back,
Enjoy today before it becomes Yesterday.
Let your heart soar across the universe,
Free to fly as light as a dove,
‘Cause all you really need is love.
Baby you’re a rich man so don’t let me down,
You’ve got a whole lot of something so hey Jude don’t frown.

It’s been a hard days night,
Working towards a revolution.
Blackbirds sing a familiar song,
While my guitar gently weeps as we play along.
A cry for help,
A plea to be free.


I’ve just seen a face and I should have known better,
To throw in my heart like a shot in the dark.
I want to hold your hand but man she’s so heavy,
Oh darling why could I not see,
What you are really doin’ to me.
I really should just let it be.


I’m a nowhere man lost in Norwegian Wood,
A paperback writer with nothing to write,
This woman she really can do me no good,
You can’t buy me love, never.
I’m doomed to wander Strawberry Fields forever.



I’ll Be There


No matter how long I have to wait,
I’ll be standing right here to accept my fate.
Whether rain or snow or thick driving sleet,
A year long drought or unbearable heat.
Not knowing exactly what I’m going to find,
I’ll wait right here with all my hope blind.
A smile on my face and no chance of fear,
I’ll be there because, you’re worth it my dear.