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Iceberg
Beyond me, there’s no life in sight.
It’s not until night that I glow white,
reflecting the ever-bright moonlight
off the surface of the sea,
so those who pass can clearly see,
and remember that they must avoid me,
because all they’re able to perceive
is what lies above the surface.
A cold, hard rock that serves no purpose.
The rest of me remains submerged,
only seen by submarines
and those who dive to find my means.
What lies beneath remains unseen,
a useless, worthless burdening
that only weighs me down enough
to barely keep my head afloat.
Each passing boat knows if we touch,
they’ll sink just like the Titanic sunk
to the depths of the Atlantic, stuck,
forever a disservice.
While I am left here on the surface,
crumbling, damaged, helpless, weakened
from the lethal collision that would have finally brought me recognition.
But at least I have the sun
to brighten up my dullest days.
The sun that melts away my icy layers as I decay.
Still, I’d never wish this lonely life to last forever anyway,
so I guess that maybe some would say
the sun is doing me a favor.
Yet, it is nothing like a neighbor.
The same goes for the clouds
that drift about this open space.
They’re too high in the busy sky,
too far away to hear my cry.
The most that they can do is spy
while I try and try and try and try
to reach out with a gracious smile.
Instead, they smile at each other.
I watch them float along together.
I can’t quite keep up with their pace.
The water is denser than the space.
And for me, the winds have no bias.
I’ve drifted too far from land for flight.
No bird could survive the trip, despite
the blessing of its wings
and the freedom that they bring.
Yet, even if one bird somehow
came to land upon my shoulder,
loneliness would kill that bird
before the cold or hunger ever could.
The piercing isolation should
compress its heart and lungs to dust.
Left to the careless wind to disperse
the particles throughout the empty air.
Planes fly by, but they are rare.
I can always trace the pilot’s glare.
It casts past me like nothing’s there.
His focus lies on what’s ahead,
like a train bound for its final station.
See, me, I’ve got no destination.
Rather, I float aimlessly along,
with no set path or map to follow.
Not even a simple song
that I can hum or play out loud
to drown out the blaring sound
of thoughts echoing in my head.
Thoughts that hope maybe someday
the winds could find the grace
to deliver me to a familiar face.
I know I’m not the only iceberg
floating around in this open space,
stuck with dreams that I can’t chase.
If not fame or wealth or glory,
maybe just a sunken ship to tell my story.
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I wrote this poem on a twelve hour flight to Europe, while I was feeling particularly at peace and inspired looking out my window at the open ocean below me. This poem taps into a very relatable interpretation of loneliness through the eyes of an iceberg.