Saturday, November 26, 2011

Why they shut my circus down

They said I was too touchy feely with the cheetahs
They didn’t know I used to be one
Fast, skinny, hungry for grass
For chalk and four-square
For my brothers before they started drinking
For my mother, before she stopped
Before the missionaries dunked her
Made her wear a jumpsuit
All of a sudden we felt bad for wanting coffee

They shut my circus down, it’s November’s fault.
The month her eyes crusted up so thick
Was bad news for the balloon people
She couldn’t eat, nerve wracked she felt milked,
Hungover, invaded.

She got lost in memories of sixth grade kickball
Of just wanting to be picked first
To make the team
To fill out her halter-tops, go on all the dates.

But days can taste like glass if you yell through them hard enough,
And she learned quick that she was good at yelling.
She was taught that brittle bones make for a good story,
And that bleeding fast like pennies is a source for strength.
So she shouted in apartment bathrooms 
Got tangled up with one too many brown haired boys 
who broke her body one lash at a time.

Ladies and Gentleman, Boys and Girls, Gather Round!
Come see the famous fondler of the the spotted cats!
Come see the most bendy backed asians yet!
Come see The Helium Family Singers, they'll make you a balloon animal while high pitch belting!
And through this curtain we have the woman pregnant with claws
Tears caking up her face with lips, thin, like dead leaves!

It wasn’t a lucrative sideshow.

Made the collage boys hurl rape confessions up in the trash
And mothers like mine were shocked and appalled.

She went alone on complaints that our decline was indeed her fault.
She was wearing stick on earrings
Shivering under the stethoscope,
Her eyes black with questions driving themselves into trees
It was then she thought to herself, 
How cold do I have to be to disappear?
 .
When the clot fell from inside her shallow
The big top collapsed 
Into the ground, a miscarried child.

The contortionists took it the worst
And started eating again.
The balloons ran, like they always do
into the atmosphere bursting like the squeels of
sixth grade girls running from base to base
in search of a safe home.

November was left clinking her fork to chicken bones
Staring blankly and full
Of harvest, gratitude, emptiness.
Sick from all her good luck.

The cats and I made it out, we fled
Jumped a train and headed lost.
Past all the men with flannel houses
Past all the door knockers, and turtlenecks.
Stopping only for the kids skateboarding on their stomachs,
Fast skinny cheetahs.
We waited at the bottom for them to race down the hills that only seemed
big to them then.


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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

on going back
..
I was searching for the chop of yellow hair,
the bounce,
the eyes that used to burn diamonds.

I felt like an actor.
Furrowed and desert dry
pulling for the words, hands in the dark.
My frame got horse
from all the wringing back crescents.
I felt Apology pinch my lips small,
Guilt caught the sweat and put it all back
into the cold places.

Were we underwater?
Was that why I was holding my breath? 

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Lars Bolt


Even your temples are toned.
You must moisturize like a mother
Because I can’t find forty seven anywhere,
Except for maybe this midlife crisis car
Which I am dying to fill up with Furbies
Because those are the only things more outrageous
Than these character head shots you’re showing me.   
Bare chest. Hard hat.  Matte finish.
And you are doing it! Making a living. Smarming the intern into a date.
Once the light turns green I’m going to plummet you with complements
Watch you bat and gnash them with those pearly white bones.
Lars.  He swivels his brag into the bar stool.
He is elbow deep in status and I’m regretting all this lip gloss.
Two glasses in, I finally just tell him,
Buy bigger pants.
Your thighs are googling me.
And cool it with this small of the back business.
You know what I’m talking about.
     Ladies, you know what I’m talking about.
Where they arch you up to borrow your balance?
There’s no way out. 
You’re Souffléd.
We may have had a mirage of hope, Larz and me.
When he glowed up a smoke, I did feel a draw
As though I knew I would want to tune in next week.
His deep thumb ashed, and pulled focus down
Sunset Cement, to my Ohio feet, sandaled.
That’s when then numbers came
Like bucketed fish
Wading in the limited oxygen of someone else's catch.  



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