truly funny
cynical to most
blinded by love
he stumbles across the world
cryptically sweet
and unbearingly funny
you wouldn't think he would have a heart
after the hell he has been put through
dig a little deeper
push a little farther
find this person
the one who can love
with a whole heart
instead of being broken
everytime
she doesn't say hi
he needs to say bye
his pretty little muse
his cynical mind
but his pretty little muse
pays no mind
she doesn't see
it
if she does
she ignores it
he is truly funny
cynical to most
he is also blinded by love
and that undying thirst of love to come















Comments
After my experiences, I'd pretty much decided that being insensate feels better than being let down when it comes to love. I'd fooled myself and clung onto things that never actually were; I might sound cynical, but it's just what it is.
Loneliness can hurt, but unperturbed solitude feels better than the drama I'd go through chasing pipe dreams.
--
"What is he that builds stronger than either the mason, the shipwright, or the carpenter?"
"The gallows-maker; for that frame outlives a thousand tenants."
-Two gravediggers, Hamlet, V.i.42-45
made me teary a bit
very nice though
its a good thing ASS LOL
i was trying to be NICE
not feeling...will screw u over later. u will look back and say...i should have showed them how i really felt about it.
thats what i did. clung to things that never actually were...i did that a lot.
lonliness hurts like hell. ive never felt so alone as when i am around people who care about me.
Loneliness does hurt; I don't cling to it much anymore, though. I'm just moving along with the pace...
--
"What is he that builds stronger than either the mason, the shipwright, or the carpenter?"
"The gallows-maker; for that frame outlives a thousand tenants."
-Two gravediggers, Hamlet, V.i.42-45
it will hurt much more if u keep doing it. mark my words
--
"What is he that builds stronger than either the mason, the shipwright, or the carpenter?"
"The gallows-maker; for that frame outlives a thousand tenants."
-Two gravediggers, Hamlet, V.i.42-45
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