Takes a dried up ballpoint, lemon juice and water, keeps a diary invisibly. In the kitchen corner of a basement bachelor's suite, there's a certain search for certainty, you know we'll never see her hands touch her childhood home in photos that she took. It's one more omission from a high school history book; how whole lives are knifed and pushed aside. To whom it may concern... To whom it may concern... There's a bus that's leaving half an hour from now. this is to inform... It won't take her where she really wants to go. yours, sincerely yours... So she sits there with her luggage at her side. yours, sincerely yours... In the empty stations of our empty lives Take a broken bottle. Take a rafter beam or take a needle and a tarnished spoon. All just words to kill off one more unheard statement of another dying afternoon; she says she's leaving soon. So so long to ten hour shifts and faking sympathies. Farewell to piles of bills, unpaid utilities. All rolled up and unfurled like a flag. Wake up and pack your bag... To whom it may concern... To whom it may concern... There's a bus that's leaving half an hour from now. this is to inform... It won't take her where she really wants to go. yours, sincerely yours... So she sits there with her luggage at her side. yours, sincerely yours... Leaving empty stations, leaving empty lives "it's like being sick all the time, I think, coming home from work, sick in that low-grade continuous way that makes you forget what it's like to be well. we have never in our lives known what it is to be well. what if I were coming home, I think, from doing work that I loved and that was for us all, what if I looked at the houses and the air and the streets, knowing they were in accord, not set against us, what if we knew the powers of this country moved to provide for us and for all people — how would that be — how would we feel and think and what would we create?"