Comment if you visit for goodness sakes!

Comment if you visit for goodness sakes!

Subscribe Now:

Saturday, June 24, 2006

Now that's some Baby-Makin' stuff!

Current mood: pleased
Category: Romance and Relationships

Last night....

You cuddled your head under my arm and slowly grazed your hand accross my stomach
Playing with my panties with a knowing touch as to what you were stimulating underneath
A slow movement up to my breasts exciting my breath to a quick steady pace.

You untucked your face from my arm and slowly moved down my tummy
Down to my freshly trimmed garden, ready to graze on my fruits
You, stimulating my waterfall thats pours my sweet love all over you
Me, welcoming you up to put your strength inside of me, swimming in the pool of life

I feel so much pleasure as you slide easily in and out of me
I keep a strong yet graceful grip around you as you explore inside
Just enough friction to feel like a glove, slick with the juices that welcome you home
I'm caught up in the pleasure and throw the pillow over my face
My body is on fire, blood pulsing through my pleasure zones.
Your arms hold me effortlessly
You whisper my name as I grab your thigh to pull you in deeper and tighter
My body moans with my mouth's sighs
I'm ready, you're ready
You give me your seed to make mine

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Katrina: Gulfport, Mississippi 9 months later

The feeling is indescribable as I drive my rental car along the bumpy highway. She had given me a tour the day before, but I wasn't prepared. I really couldn't fathom what I was about to see. Only three rolls of film, so I put the camera down on the car seat next to me and rolled the window all the way down. The humid salty air painted my skin as it whipped into the truck. I caught myself holding my breath until I choked. She would interject into my desperate babbling from time to time to give me some "locals-only" insider knowledge as to what I was seeing. I was happy to hear her voice as it meant my own incessant chatter and bewilderment could rest for a moment. On the other hand, her words created a sad desperation of their own to mark my heart like few other experiences.
Photobucket
I felt like I was stuck in a quasi-world dangling between the decadent South, a war-zone, a third world country, and an old settler's baron land. Addresses marked on dying hundred-year-old oak trees with nervous spray paint. It was hard to tell where we were without the markings. I kept imagining the horror of those stranded or too weak to evacuate. The shrimp boats catapulted into the trees, tucked away in the marsh.
Photobucket
I'm back the second day on my own this time. Fully stocked with film and free to stop and soak in the surroundings as I catalog what I can see in 35 mm roll after roll. The beach is closed except for carefully combed sections of pristine white Gulf-Coast sand. The scene is scant so I casually stroll off to the restricted portions of the waters. Here is where I find a treasure trove of wreckage and a host of saturated items representing lifetimes of memories and accumulation of personal stories. Mattresses rotten and algae trimmed caught under the haggard, broken docks. A microwave oven clinging to the branches of an old oak tree lofting in the shallow beach waters. No one will ever know the extent of the items that have taken up residence in the warm, welcoming waters. A ladies handbag washed up on shore adorned with proud barnacles sits lonely in the sand.
Photobucket
Once elegant Southern palaces with their garage-conversion slave quarters sit gutted. Foundations remain as a newfound patio for the luxury of a FEMA trailer.
Photobucket
The nearby cemetery is disheveled as if having fallen prey to pipe bombs. I close my eyes and suck in a deep sigh as her words float in my mind "yes, there were caskets floating in the flood waters."

Photos: copyright 2006 Nichole Leigh