Un-thinking
Jayda
I’m trying to think on you
like I do Tennessee.
Remember how good the mountains looked
cut against those perfect powder clouds
and that baby-blue sky, but still
how all that was made mirage by searing heat.
How warm it was, that even the eyes sweltered,
their corners torn, scratched from
wiping at sweat every few steps.
Also—those Tennessee creeks.
The tingles that rise from foot to hip
prodding down the water, under the treeline
dodging rocks, kickin fish, the way
they kiss our toes, despite our mistreatment,
like they want to nip away all the damaged
withered skin.
But the leeches, too,
get real nosy, and ticks, in the tall grass
and all that water, brown, sedimented,
was probably mostly piss.
We were there for 8 years. It still lingers
in shutterclicks of meadows, horses,
old ladies on porches, the scrape
of the rocking chair against decaying wood.
The forget-me-nots beside the yellow swings
thoughts of cleaning out the shed
and painting the roof, promises sutured together
by shooting breezes, but there wasn’t
much else. All else was only the dead
look you’d see when passing
someone on the street:
the look in their eyes—weeds
the knowing that every tomorrow is
only yesterday in a different blouse. All that being, dry
and senseless, stumbling barefoot
out of bed and into the kitchen, hazed
to find coffee and sit and swat
at flies, watching the neighborhood
dog pawing for scraps that, well,
just aren’t there.
like I do Tennessee.
Remember how good the mountains looked
cut against those perfect powder clouds
and that baby-blue sky, but still
how all that was made mirage by searing heat.
How warm it was, that even the eyes sweltered,
their corners torn, scratched from
wiping at sweat every few steps.
Also—those Tennessee creeks.
The tingles that rise from foot to hip
prodding down the water, under the treeline
dodging rocks, kickin fish, the way
they kiss our toes, despite our mistreatment,
like they want to nip away all the damaged
withered skin.
But the leeches, too,
get real nosy, and ticks, in the tall grass
and all that water, brown, sedimented,
was probably mostly piss.
We were there for 8 years. It still lingers
in shutterclicks of meadows, horses,
old ladies on porches, the scrape
of the rocking chair against decaying wood.
The forget-me-nots beside the yellow swings
thoughts of cleaning out the shed
and painting the roof, promises sutured together
by shooting breezes, but there wasn’t
much else. All else was only the dead
look you’d see when passing
someone on the street:
the look in their eyes—weeds
the knowing that every tomorrow is
only yesterday in a different blouse. All that being, dry
and senseless, stumbling barefoot
out of bed and into the kitchen, hazed
to find coffee and sit and swat
at flies, watching the neighborhood
dog pawing for scraps that, well,
just aren’t there.
Jayda is a person who does things and will continue to do things sometimes!!!
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