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Aiden Paine Poem
Today my eldest son visited me after long months of absence,
and we took a drive, talking candidly about the spectrum
of kinship and events, identity and illusion. He confessed to me
that once I had sent him a batch of poems,
which had actually moved him. Reading them on the toilet,
carefully poised and concentrated as a sensitive sufferer
of hemorrhoids, he suddenly had an epiphany,
and, as he told me then, discovered for the first time
in his life, real tears pooling in his eyes, something precious
about his scribbling father. All his life rose before him:
adolescence, anger, confusion, truth, and all the circumstances
that lead us to the solitude we must endure
for the duration;
felt most keenly in the privacy of our common, often unpleasant
biological functions . . . Noticing the roll was empty,
and without hesitation, a decision was made:
ass-cutting eloquence, the stench of life and swirling love.
Copyright © Aiden Paine | Year Posted 2006
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Details |
Aiden Paine Poem
When in disbelief,
I sense the presence I cannot speak,
come again to my emptiness
as if by another's grace . . .
may I give something back
beyond the silence --
voice, place.
Copyright © Aiden Paine | Year Posted 2006
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