I pulled a Walt Whitman, tripping-out on my back in the grass, with ants crawling up my arms and neck, my ears full of birdsong and dogs barking, something flying by and stopping on my head, plastered to the earth like a fly caught under a coat of paint —
To love the earth and be a part of it, to leave my silhouette on the blades of grass, the outline of my body with the weeds and left-behind leaves, a flicker in the breeze unseen, unnoticed, just a moment I can transcend myself and be reminded.
Categories: death
No doubt written prior to the invention of the Walt Whitman smartphone.
Lots to like then and now.
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Nice! Thanks for going back in time with me there, mister!
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