Wnq Writers - Tumblr Posts
This basically sums up my entire meaning for life but I'd rather be remembered than missed
"I wanted to be unforgettable. Indelible. I wanted to haunt their hearts and minds—to be everywhere and nowhere, spectacular and out of reach. Only in the chaos did it dawn on me. Being remembered is not the same as being missed."
September, elevate my perspective and lower my tolerance for anything pushing me out of alignment, nourish my self-assurance, and starve any feelings of comparison. water my discernment with love so flowers can grow from all my decisions. may I find clarity every time I choose me.
🪞
“the art of being your own muse and recreating yourself as many times as you need, adding more layers and color to your spirits canvas until you like what you see.”
— iambrillyant
whisper
Stolen flowers from the cemetery
answer sorrow’s questions
as the thin plumage of reality wearies.
© Margaux EmmanuelÂ
bullet eclipse
an asylum for doubt
a saturated droughtÂ
where your eyes spiral down
my arteries
unspoken words amble upon a shardÂ
of reason
of treasonÂ
inoculation
against melancholia
palpitations
holding hands with dementia
I can now hearÂ
the moans of hysteria
 © Margaux Emmanuel
bittersweet
Swirling in the ashes of honey, I awake crying under a bridge. A blur of roses forcefully blooms in my lips letting faraway delusions plague me in the twilight. When the crepuscule flees while passionately kissing the horizon, when there is nothing to write, nothing right and nothing to feel, where do the lonely petals of sentiment go? The scream of silence reigns, misunderstood. My reflection in a tearful cup of tea has suddenly dulled reality.
© Margaux Emmanuel
sunflowers in the attic
to paint a tomb
in the prose of life
to caress a wound
with the edge of a knife
to write letters to the deadÂ
in a mosaic of hurt
to start bleeding dread
waiting for an answerÂ
to appease the thirst
to feel the verse of your lips
follow the prosody of my skinÂ
to let the streams of your tears
carve pain on the breath of chagrin
why is your name scribbled on a grave?
it channels in the streets of this morbid haze
where I can feel your cold pulse
your screamsÂ
your presence
absence
echo in my veins
sewing a lace insomniaÂ
dissecting a lacunaÂ
searching in the emptiness of my heart
until it rips apart
breathe in
breathe out
you have blinded me
from the compass of existence
diagnosed with a troubled
brokenÂ
spilled
penÂ
the only solutionÂ
is to burn the paper
burn me
© Margaux Emmanuel
painkiller
You drink pain from the bottle. The shower-head cries, and I sink into the half-hearted water while sinking into the wine-stained corners of your lips, and I wonder if falling out of love is not remembering the way your pale, wet, eyes would pronounce my name, not remembering the way the water rings of your bedside table would yawn for help. Sunken blister packs with your name stuck in the cardboard package bleed through heavy nights, the ink sifting into the floorboards gasping for air. In the wrinkles of the wood, I tried to paint the bullets of the human heart, but that candlelit smirk cannot be trapped in acrylic. You are an opaque sensation, a splintered heart.
© Margaux Emmanuel
The champagne lingering in the driveway of his eyelids ransacks the minibar of his depressive tendencies. A suffering insufferable dandy with a corduroy smile spills the cough syrup on the window sill and walks through a non-smoking floor with an unlit cigarette giggling in between his teeth. The stained carpet mutters that he’s a homeless homesick and the tears sticking to the glass table know it already. So he sits back on a fatigued settee and pours himself a dubious drink with a parking lot view. So he sits back uncomfortably with his heart a little tight and he tells himself that it’s just another sick day.
sick days | © Margaux Emmanuel
clumsy town boy
Your heart
is stuck
in a long
car ride
edging
an endless
desert
empty
road
in 1973
sitting in
the backseat
reading Kerouac
butter-colored
baseball cap
no watch
timeless
wrist
high school
bomber jacket
covering a
white shirt
a chagrined
blue bra
his
aviator
Ray Bans
sliding down
the bridge
of its nose
listening
to the cassette
of a shattered
existence.
Two years
thousands of miles
away
he’s still
the one
appearing
in the
highway landscapes
ghostlike
you can almost
smell
his cologne
you thought
that you had
written
the last act
of that
tragedy
licked the seal
of that envelope.
But the trunk
is still
full of his
letters
the cursive ink
bruises you
at night
oh
the clumsy
town
boys
they really
mess you up.
© Margaux Emmanuel
you missed the nine o’clock train
You wear
silence’s
jacket
and the acne
that creeps down
the shadows
of your neck
scribbles down
your screams
on the back
of a crumpled napkin
that you always keep
in your back left
pocket.
You are soaked in
faltering voices
yet you are
the flower
growing
in the washed-out
asylum of humanity
and I am in
desperate need
of your fragrance.
I thought
that I had caught
a glimpse of you
arms crossed
wondering down
the hallway
of unsaid nostalgia
perhaps chewing some skin
off your lower lip
perhaps a tear
or two
polishing the floor
under your feet.
But you always come
twenty minutes late
to the suburbs
of my emotions
so you saw me
and kept walking.
A new chapter
but
the ink
from
the last one
always
bleeds
through. Â
© Margaux Emmanuel
sandpaper
Lining up
empty
soft drink
bottles
on the
windowsill
of a
dented heart
peering at
the streets
of silence
discolored
by daylight
you remember
a checkered
red and white
picnic cloth
flattened
burnt
grass
screeching
underneath
an orange tree branch
dipping in
a timid
foamless
ocean
sky
his honey skin
melting in the tide
pruney words
kisses
a chronic daydream
he never
draws hearts
with sidewalk chalk
but his initials
are sown
into the collar
of your reverie
you’re theÂ
dissociative
teenager
that can’t help
but miss him so.
© Margaux Emmanuel
close the door on your way out
At night, her grey eyes faintly glistening in the light of a row of lampposts, she stood in the shadow of a suburban cul-de-sac front porch. She mouthed with a grin, in the language of cigarette smoke, the words he would pronounce, his back resting upon an orange steel locker. She’d usually roll her eyes and answer:
Well, that’s very nice. Now, be a dear and close the door on your way out.
She chuckled thinking about it. He didn’t know that, afterwards, she’d lock herself in the bathroom stall, the no man’s land where the wandering soldiers, enslaved by dreams with no perspective would carve the truth with their bitten bitter tongues. And oh boy the profanity. She’d sympathize with the blistering paint of sin while running her fingers over the walls’ scars and tattoos, let their meaning soak her fingertips. She liked it. But did she understand it? She once saw:
If only we could all love.
This sentence creeped back to her with the small-town breeze, seeping into her skin. She put out her cigarette against the shadowed brick wall and sat back on the patio chair. She noticed how rusty the metal was. Maybe it had always been that way.
She wanted to write a play. Not a famous one that would make the Hollywood actors drool, but one of those eighty-cents coffee stained and dog-eared garage sale plays that you’d buy out of pity and out of a tingling curiosity for the literary pariahs. The sort that receives a scattered applause, the actors timidly bowing in response. But it would be about the caesuras of the heartbeat of this town. It would be about the dark blue teenage dreams.
Her eyes wondered to the cigarette ashes laying on the floor, intently staring at her. She smiled in approval to her thoughts, got up, and went back in.
© Margaux Emmanuel
a dreamlike love bite
Two songs
away from you
having lunch
by the car
I close my eyes
memories
of kissing pretty neighbors
in their treehouses
paint dripping
down the easel
of the night
all I wanted
was for love
to bite
and now
you’re smiling
by my side
I guess
I’ll rob the sky of tonight’s stars
for you
but once my eyelids open
I’m still a lovesick kid
in an empty parking lot
and the stars always find
a place to hide.
© Margaux Emmanuel
Liebestraum
Liszt’s Liebestraum playing in the background
She watched the two lovers while gripping a trembling glass in her hand. He caressed each note’s delicate skin, responding to every one of her quivers, covering her neck with slow kisses, holding her hand through the peril of the third candenza. No desires were left unfulfilled. Every pressed key said je t’aime, brought the two farther from the heavy haze of the day, interlaced into one dream of love unattainable by the mournful song of reality.
“Have you ever loved me?”, he asked. She turned back to him, unwillingly letting the pianist part from her sight. She took a nervous gulp from her drink, avoiding his eyes. She noticed that his lips were hanging apart, longing for an answer. Her eyes wandered again towards the origin of this music of the heavens. Was it jealousy that she felt? A bovarysme?
“Why did you ask me to meet you here?”, she finally replied in a low voice, not looking at him, the pain crawling onto her words.
“Mon amour”, he whispered, his shaking hands snaking towards hers. She let them intertwine.
Don’t call me that, she thought. She let him.
“This-”, she said, letting the words dangle in the air, her eyebrows scowling from the distress in the stiffness of his fingers. She stopped, licked her lips, and let the background melody inch back into her ears.
“This… has been over for a very long time, Arthur”, she finished, dipping into the placid waters of his brown eyes, in a cracked murmur.
The bags under his eyes were heavy, the tense lines of his face were hidden under a patchy beard; he hadn’t been sleeping for days. She had never called him Arthur. Resigned, they both moved their chairs in the direction of the pianist, sticky tears consoling their cheeks. They wondered what love was while watching the Liebestraum couple dance in such unison, wearing the foolish grin of passion, yet knowing that the night always ends.
“We never had that. We never had… anything”, he calmly said.
The pianist embraced his love one last time. His fingers parted from her thirsty touch, craving for more. The listener could almost hear their silent weep, could almost feel the suffering in his fingertips. He rose from his seat, bowed. Nobody applauded. He left the scene.
© Margaux Emmanuel
The diagonal scar swelling on his cheek shadows the stalemate of salvation a glissando of desire that flew west for the winter away from the tempered light of day. The anacoluthon of love trapped in the pillowcase feathers of the "have you ever been hurt ?" speaks the demotic language of the pinned knight on the chessboard of neurasthenia. His heart writes letters with no return address My heart is trembling with haste. "Nunc scio quid sit amor."
la llovizna comprende | © Margaux Emmanuel
What do you think?”, he asked in that raspy voice of his, an unlit cigarette between his teeth, the “-k” firmly pressed against his palate in an assertive manner, while unscrewing a burnt-out lightbulb. She was sitting on the windowsill, only wearing his dark blue Lacoste polo shirt, unbuttoned. Her back was towards him but she could feel his every move, she knew that he would have that slight habitual scowl resting on his face and that he would mutter “shit” under his breath any second now, realizing that the lightbulb didn’t fit. “Shit”, he whispered. There it goes. “About that book of yours?”, she finally answered. She could sense his head’s nod, he was too busy to notice that she wasn’t facing him. She slowly brought her naked legs, covered in a thin layer of goosebumps from the chilly morning air, back into the apartment. He was standing on the old chair, the straw seat deforming from his weight, a dozen lightbulbs at the chair’s feet, slightly rolling back and forth, back and forth, from the uneven floorboards. His head was a harvest of untamed blond curls that he had never quite grown out, tickling the back of his shirt’s collar. He had those green-blue marshland eyes that would remind her of those times when she used to swim in the dark green creeks with the small-town kids. But then, suddenly, you had to quickly jump out to run after the ice-cream truck’s music, the water dripping off your wet body, tracing your steps on the concrete pavements. You would never quite see the truck, you could only hear it; you had to trust the melody. He hadn’t known her back then.  “What do you want me to think about it?”, she inquired with a slightly flirtatious grin after a long, reflective pause. He let out a small laugh, still fiddling with the lightbulbs. “I… want you to think that it captures the beauty of your touch”, he said in an almost mocking manner, his eyebrows rising as he pronounced those words. “That doesn’t really mean anything does it?”, she replied with a perplexed smile. “It doesn’t. You need to understand that you aren’t a muse; all of the sentences of my book are already written in the crevices of your skin.“ He was silent after that. "Well, you could do better then.
water sizzling on the concrete | © Margaux EmmanuelÂ
Ill-chosen metaphors towel my body dry inch towards the word toying with the tip of my tongue you know the word the one eyeing the dark corners of the after party of infatuation the one stinging in the touch of bare-knuckled motorists pretending to be in trouble in the implied sensuality of those haunted eyes I said no peeking you already know the word oh I’m not trying to stop you, love all of these untalented talented teens know exactly what they want now turn off the radio whisper it in your licorice breath I’ll just be here falling asleep in the arms of dawn waiting.
don’t look at me like that, help me find this word | © Margaux Emmanuel
women in love
Your face clouds over
when the picture
of the girl
with the red
octagonal
sunglasses
red cheeks
from having recently cried
leaning
on your car
falls out of your wallet
only to remind you
in the sotto voce
of memory
that she kept your
love letters
in a battered copy
of Women in love.
You wonder
if she kept it
she always said
that it was a mistake
to reread the novels
of your youth
Oh, she was a hesitation
You remember
every rhyme
every bite
of the poems
that she wrote
on your lips
for she always said
that you only know
what you feel
once it’s been written.
She was damnation
You remember
seeing the
ink stains
sprawled on the cover
of her
DH Lawrence
in the hands
of someone else
at that
end of the year
garage sale
he was laughing
chewing
his cheeks
but the book
isn’t funny
maybe he was laughing
at your poems
he was laughing
because he doesn’t love her
and he never will
maybe he was laughing
because you are trapped
in those pages
you still live
every curve
every sharpness
of her letters
and she now lives
in the verse of another
he wasn’t laughing.
© Margaux EmmanuelÂ
There was this boy, checkered Vans and we played charades in the back of the bus sixteen we sometimes we would always miss it and we would walk into the ring and he would eat his vanilla ice-cream and our eyes would meet in full contact but I would fight in southpaw; our moves were mirrored but we never managed never dared to really hit. His sticky chocolate eyes melted onto my black leather gloves and our words took our hearts into a headlock, silently skimming the sides of every post of his sweet Cupid’s bow with bare knuckles, untied shoes. One day he just wasn't at the bus stop I waited and waited he called and said "I took bus fourteen" but I loved him too much and he didn't love me enough to sucker punch.
disqualified | © Margaux Emmanuel