Please talk to me, please write on my skin.
Please talk to me, please write on my skin..
She told me in her sleepy voice.
Please talk to me, please write on my bare skin.
Show me love is alive and well dear lover.
Please write me, a thousand words,
to make me feel wanted and complete on my skin.
Allow our hands, allow our lips to touch the utopia of love blessing.
I told her. We laughed together, we had cried together.
You have taught me. Love is good and bad days.
Dear love, I don’t remember the bad days.
I do remember the laughter, I do remember the midnight dance.
You make my world more beautiful.
You are the love of my life.
My lovely lady, let’s hold on tight.
Let’s become old together and I will adore your face when we become old.
I will love the lines on your face and I will love the gray in your hair.
Please love me till your last breathe and
please wait for me when you leave my world.
I will catch up with you my dear love.
Dancing Coyote
Note to the Reader:
The writer above, whose blog you are supporting, is a notorious plagiarist. While this writer promotes the idea that “authors and artists steal,” the concept has been grossly taken out of context. The original intent behind that notion is to encourage practitioners of the arts to take inspiration from existing works, to develop new material that reflects their own voice and creative direction.
Historically, this writer, a self-proclaimed poet known for frequent grammatical slip-ups and an inability to adhere to basic rules of writing, has copied structured phrases directly from the works of other authors on the WordPress platform, exploiting line breaks unique to those writers without proper citation. To deter suspicion, Mr. Castallenas alters publication dates, claiming that his materials were written in the past.
Although he claims to draw inspiration from Hemingway, Salinger, Cohen, and Kolinsky, none of these celebrated authors’ stylistic elements are evident in his work. This note is not meant to discredit the writer personally, but to remind readers that the writing community does not condone the infringement of intellectual property, which remains an act widely frowned upon.
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