Who’s Gonna Watch You Die?

David Kain
2 min readJul 1, 2021
“Happy Earth Day” by JanLendL [too busy!]

Two men saw a yellow beyond what we see today. I hurt because of them — I hurt because I could be them, and because everyone I know is like them.

Death is not a tragedy — it is nature. Premature death is, still, just nature. Appointed death is different than normal. A sun setting at noon is nonsense.

I am unsure of what to say, though I know far too well that I should think certain ways. I don’t think in silence — though I’m supposed too.

I can not speak on why these men did what they did, but I do know that the fear of speaking out loud echoes silently and endlessly. I do not know why they did what they did, but I know roads.

Roads, today, are often the same. Heavily congested — they don’t side with the atypical. Roads are unforgiving. They are not mothers. Mothers forgive.

I lend my heart to mothers. How can we be what you are? There is such a danger in every breath and every atom — yet, mothers remain the strongest of our kind.

I don’t know if I will ever understand love in the way that a mother does. Loss, to me, will forever be minor, compared. For every glance I take, a mother takes two. For every inhale, my mother has twice breathed.

Today, I pray, regardless of belief, for the souls of all mothers. Two particular hit my mind — one face that I know, one that I’ve never seen. For two fathers — one on this plane and one not — I silently, slowly breathe. I think of my own — one whom I suffered. What if roles reversed?

For this, I do not know.

Dollars die. People, despite burials, never. We do not.

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David Kain

Poetry, politics, and sometimes video games. #FreeAssange