As I drove back home last night,
alone and drunk in grief,
I kept singing my favorite song
Because it reminded me of Mom.
And it felt like a warm fire
engulfing my body, numbing away everything.
The orange lights blinded my eyes
'til I could see Mamma smiling down at me.
I could feel her blue hands touching me,
so tender and cold.
Her eyes held sea-black thoughts beneath them;
Her bare feet trembling in delight;
No one could see her loosened seatbelt,
but I could—blue, red, yellow, blue—
All blacked out.
Blue lights traced down my sweat beads.
The scar curved down my cheeks and turned pale pink,
like the rosebud potted near the window.
A few stories rushed like strangers;
A few cities rose in the chorus like abandoned metaphors;
A few things got tougher multiple piles of earth and moons away.
But I knew I couldn't change this one thing:
The Rosebud.
Life's a little piece of shit.
You've had no clue how much
you impacted my life, like the blue color
that drew me every time you smiled.
You cared, I cared, they cared—most of us did—
Just that it wasn't enough to push anything forward.
The noise grew like a dead roar at the back of
my head; I couldn't turn it off,
For it spelled the truth—and truths were meant to be heard.
This time, nothing could stop me
from fading out, as you did.
I couldn't get away from myself the way you did from me.
It's okay: I'm fine; everything's fine
except us.
The sun gulped down our little planet,
yet all we saw was blue—smoking blue.
We were doomed; we screwed up;
We got hurt—just not the way others did.
You sold us away, Mamma—
Everything.
You stood on the porch,
waiting for me to return home
and have pasta night with you.
I drove harder.
Dead birds scream louder,
Tires squeak loud against the low song in a club,
The blushing breeze savors my ache more;
The infinity in the oblivion grew bigger;
The red lights turn muted;
I've never run the red light till today, Mamma.
YOU ARE READING
the slow art of breathing bitter
Poetryslow dancing love and pain in the midnight chorus of liquor-washed autumn green ... || a constellation of destructive poetry ||