Have you never lied
to friend, family,
or an absolute stranger?
Not the lies that bleed
like knives through the chest,
but the truths you borrowed
off lives you’ve spent
to be where you stand,
for the theatre
of your truth-telling.
Have you never lied
to friend, family,
or an absolute stranger?
Not the lies that split atoms in two,
smudging ashen crimson
on the concrete canvases
of proud cityscapes,
but the truths you buried
in your bones
until your brain caved in,
for the illusion
of greater good.
Have you never lied
for the love of your faith,
for the sake of your creed,
for the truths you told yourself
needed crafting with care?
Have you never lied
when questions were left at your door;
questions that threaten
to crumble the spines
of your acquired taste?
Have you never lied
when lives were put to trial;
lives that never agreed
to your inheritances,
and yet you found yourself
on the jury?
Have you never lied;
the thin, flimsy ones,
the fat, morbidly obese ones,
as you looked yourself in the mirror
and muttered in shallow breaths:
"This is my story,
and I’ll tell it
however I deem fit."
The ghosts of yesterday
haunt today’s hangmen.
The past returns
not for memory;
but for flesh.
Grammar knew this
before we did:
the past participle
always comes back
to finish the sentence.
Power, like planets,
orbits in ellipses.
Today’s revolutions
are tomorrow’s kingdoms.
Ellipses do not close.
They continue.
And so do you.
No matter how much you lie,
none of it will ever be enough.
Because beyond us simpletons,
lies an entire universe
unbothered
by what we call truth
and what we disguise as lies.
But that won’t stop you,
will it?
Truth is a gamble,
and you must roll the dice.