There's the last winter of '92 buried
under the tree I had planted with Mom.
A vinyl plays somewhere in the corner
that ceases the silence of the knife
scraping against my burnt skin.
My vision blurs, but I can still make out
the poster with a bleeding skull
where the red muffler from Atlas hangs.
A sad kid cries behind my window and
all I can do is laugh like there's no tomorrow.
We hang the half-burned poetry with
the other whitewashed clothes,
and then lay in the sun, to soak it all.
Sometimes we fall asleep on the hay,
the dirt and blood sketching
murals of our past.
I used to fall asleep when they made
dusty yellow small-talk.
The sky would leak in bleached lilac,
and the ache to die little by little
will grow deep inside.
Sometimes I bang my head against
the edge of the cold bathtub.
Our days are spinning; white light,
and the last sip of stale wine.
So we bask a little longer in the
dull daylight, and let it take away
the leftover of our decayed brains.
A snippet of last December rushes out
of the fractured window before I can catch it.
The tiles are red and warm, like the liquid
flowing through my limbs and lips.
Slit my brain open, burn it with the last cigar
and throw it out before it rots in your teeth.
YOU ARE READING
play, pause, replay
Poetrylike another silhouette washed in the blue of the November afterglow - a dying ache of living ... || caffeinated afterthoughts and lovers' vomit ||