Neon Hunger
The chemical intoxications that cities offer—
Don't be fooled by them.
They drip like honey from dark-handed mouths,
Sweet with poison, smooth with sin.
Billboards breathe in fluorescent lies,
Whispers stitched into sleepless nights.
The air is laced with longing and lead,
Every breath a bargain with the dead.
Glass towers hum like synthetic gods,
Pulsing promises through electric veins.
But every glow has a ghost behind it,
Every rhythm, a rot beneath.
I lost my mother to the silence between sirens,
A brother to pills that glowed like stars.
A friend disappeared into a screen-lit void,
Eyes open, but spirit too far.
You walk on concrete stitched with cracks,
Dreams seeping through like gasoline.
You're high on fumes of what could be,
While your roots starve silently.
My lover fell for the neon tide,
Chasing glamour down rusted alleys.
We kissed under halogen halos—
Then she vanished into endless parties.
The city calls with velvet voice,
And wraps you in its chrome caress.
But behind its lips is a hungry silence—
A thousand souls that once said yes.
But ask: who drinks from your downfall?
Who stirs the smoke that blinds your eyes?
Terrorist gangs that recruit from despair,
Feeding on kids who forgot how to cry.
Corporations with platinum smiles,
Selling solace in subscription form.
Developers gutting your childhood street,
Raising glass cathedrals to the storm.
Pharmaceutical kings in silk-lined towers
Count your ghosts in quarterly gains.
And in the shadows, masked men profit—
From every overdose, riot, or flame.
The effects are dazzling, addictively bright,
But defects bloom in the shadowed light.
And once you drink from the city's tongue,
You forget the sound of where you’re from.
I gave it my youth, my sleep, my skin—
Each heartbeat sold for a moment's spin.
So if the city smiles, offering bliss—
Count your scars before you kiss.
So beware the pulse, the kiss, the gleam—
The city's love is a haunted dream.
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