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Feedback, please?

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-25 4:31

So it's been a while since I've written, and I'm probably pretty rusty, but I'd appreciate it if you guys could give me some feedback.

This was written for the prompt "firefly."

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     It's nighttime, around seven or eight o'clock; in the summer, it would still be light outside, just barely dusk. But the year is aging, and the world has greyed to winter, so by now it's nearly pitch-black, especially away from the bright sterility of the hospital and the dingy shine of the streets. The darkness is not silent; the rough purr of highway traffic swirls through the air, breaking the silence but not shattering it. If sounds were light, the park would glow, but dimly, like fireflies in the night. Your breath stains the air on an exhale and you shiver, not just from the cold. It's time.
     You close your eyes, tired. More tired than you can say, more tired than you ever thought possible. This has been a long time coming, and fear has left you, replaced only by a ragged peacefulness. Your medicine has made you dizzy, but it's wearing off now. As you sit down, feeling the frosted grass crunch under your weight as you sit down, clumsy from the cold and the pain. The pain is rapidly returning without the drugs to push it back, and though you whimper in discomfort, it's worth it because you want your final moments clear. You shiver again, your hospital gown glaringly inadequate for the depths of winter, and you lean back against a tree. The park is deserted tonight, the cold driving away even the criminals and the homeless, which is good, because it gives you time alone. You're even thankful that you picked this place, despite the slums that surround it, because the lack of funding for the poor neighborhood means that the malfunctioning lightpole has yet to be replaced.
    You press a hand to your side as the pain spikes suddenly, and you notice how quickly your fingers are going numb. You guess that hypothermia cannot be too far away; you've read up on this, you know how it works, and you tilt your head back against the tree, rough bark scratching your scalp, and watch your breaths curl upwards against the sky. You wish for a moment that you could be far from the city, that you could witness the cold stare of the stars unobscured by smog and unbroken by buildings. A shudder interrupts your thoughts and you realize that your breathing is starting to slow. Instead of panic, you feel anticipation pass through you; finally, release. Your illness has kept you locked away for far too long, and now, now you can finally let go. You sigh and close your eyes. You are passing out, you realize dimly, and you smile.
   In the last few moments before dawn, a lightpole flashes in the distance, like fireflies in the dying night.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-25 5:45

Contractions are pig disgusting.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-25 10:01

oh my, this is happening to me?!? welp then I guess I really must give a shit!! heh, I'd be much too callous to care if this were happening to someone else, that's for sure

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-25 13:55

Go North

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-25 13:56

Get blanket

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-25 13:56

Go West

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-25 13:56

Look

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-25 15:34

Right off the bat, saying what it would be like in summer makes no sense. If you want to give the summer more significance maybe, or just take it out. It's fluff as it stands, and not interesting.
A little more info about the disease might help. At this point I'm not interested in this person at all.
Why glad about the lightpole? Is the character supposed to be seeing the flash at the end? Because a little before it is established that the character has closed their eyes. Is this the same lightpole? It's really unclear what is supposed to be going on with this.
Not really sure if the character is dying from hypothermia or their disease. This should be a pretty significant event, but it's fairly dull. Wouldn't you think about your life and the people you knew in your last moments? Picture yourself free from the burden of your disease? Your pretty much just pulling the reader along instead of guiding them.
Finally, I think you should stay away from 2nd person. It doesn't really suit what is happening at all.

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-25 21:15

Go North

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-26 3:37

>>3

Name: Anonymous 2009-04-26 4:17

>>8
I think you should stay away from 2nd person.

Don't change these.
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