Concept Of His Ghost © Surazeus 2024 07 31 While lingering under the oak by the lake, watching the hawk circle the world she rules, I realize I am standing on the grave where my father lies buried in my heart, so I attempt to photograph the wind, thinking it must old concept of his ghost. All my ancestors who have lived and died over the past four hundred million years were generated in maternal womb with matter from fruit of the tree she ate, and now their bodies form soil of the Earth so I walk on them wherever I go. I have no memory of arriving here after millions of years of life and death, yet here I am, brain programmed to perceive things that exist with precision of form, so I know well how to hide from the storm while I savor sweetness of being alive. Driven by anxiety to survive, I ask the dead to not forget my name, but they are walking on the signless road far beyond where boundary of the state ends, so I confront disappointment of joy with weird frankness of honest turbulence. Though the work of living is difficult, tracking new treasures in the wilderness, I press my case for justice of desire, but the Glow Cloud that I mistook for God gazes down at me with paternal eyes, telescopes through which I perceive the world. This city is my home inside my heart where I disappear in its changing maze because my father left me psychic map I use to journey to the Promised Land, distorted by reality we share, abrupt with artificial face I wear. Should I intuit fate I gamble for to explain my failures in game of life, then I could reshape symmetry of mind as balance between the woods and the school because the obvious secret of success is how I redesign the obstacle. The person in the tale is never me because I breathe celestial air of faith while I strum lyre of Mercury and sing about my father by the fountain pool who tries to explain how it all should be, encoded in the concept of his ghost.
Surazeus Astarius Συράζευς Αστάριος. Cartographer. Epic Poet. Hermead epic poem about Philosophers 126,680 lines of blank verse. http://tinyurl.com/AstarianScriptures
Orpheus thinks about his father who must be old as the moon by now.
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