I Would Leave Me If I Could: A Collection of Poetry(12)



Your rose-colored cheeks and green eyes

and tan nose

and chestnut freckles

and blue-violet veins beneath the skin; all the good colors of some angel in a Renaissance painting.

Your eyelashes so soft and long I close my eyes

and imagine them

brushing up and down the length of my body.

If only I could be so small to lie in your eyelashes as a hammock.

Swim in the whites of your eyes.

Dive off the Cupid’s bow of your lip.

Hang with two hands

from the corner of your smile like Peter Pan from a clock tower.

Dance and splash

in the tiny brown puddles of every single freckle.

Crawl into the lobe of your ear and hide in the seashell cavern where I can hear the ocean and whisper it back to you.

Your face brings me all the joy of the entire world, right to my bed.

Right to my hands.

Right in the breath like a tide in your chest.





STUDIO CITY


I can’t tell how to condense my life into 100 words For a piece of paper

For someone to hold and have and abandon.

Really does a number on your identity.

It’s not hard. It just hurts.

Because it bursts out of me like hot lava.

I find a million dandelions blowing through my head and they are beautiful

But when they come at you like one furious wave (a few times a day)

They stick in your nose and eyes and ears You explode from the inside out Like a time lapse of a decaying animal.

I don’t want to walk around department stores that smell like wax crayons

too bright

so everybody looks like a cartoon Bleeding colors

And breaking the fourth wall and I fucking hate parallel parking the silence of Hollywood is deafening and I will die if I keep eating every meal purchased from the store.

I feel like I’m made of plastic I breathe and it doesn’t reach my lungs I eat and I don’t taste

I cry and there’s no burn in my nose anymore I’m standing in the middle of a 4-way intersection and a car is coming at me

and I have no idea which way to go.

Is this how it was supposed to feel?





EVERYTHING


Before I knew we were poor, Everything

was magic.

An empty fridge

meant freezer-burnt Popsicles for dinner.

Purple-blue mouths and toothless smiles calmed the torment in my mother’s crux.

Everything

was an adventure.

A shared bedroom with my little brother meant an eternal playmate.

A warm tent,

closed off by a blanket hung from a bunk bed and a hair dryer snuck under the sheets to keep warm.

Arctic explorers waiting for a rescue unit.

Everything

was a mystery.

Voices resounding from the living room vehemently snaking through the short halls of the apartment.

And then one day, I had

Everything

And

Everything

was over too soon.





TRAVIS


Travis was a junkie

All my friends were

I was a wallflower

I watched them tie up their arms and collapse onto couches I was never high,

and always on the same strange slow ride with them Travis rode a fixed-gear bike He had nowhere to live

But never went without somewhere to sleep Travis was handsome

He had a backpack and an iPad And nowhere to take a shower He would meet old ladies Whose husbands had moved on or passed He would make love to them For a week or two at a time Hold them in his arms

And stroke their thin hair Kiss their lips, dissolving vermilion ridges.

He would paint their fingernails and take baths with essential oils They would give him somewhere to stay and a few hundred dollars And by Sunday, Travis would tuck a perfumed envelope into his pocket

And ride off on his fixie To score

And he would come meet us With department-store lipstick on his collar And a pocket full of sour candy and dope.

I asked him how he did it.

How it didn’t rip his heart to shreds.

“I really do love them,”

he told me.

“All of them.”





ANTAGONIST


Does a ghost

know that he’s a ghost?

Does a saint

know that she’s forgiven?

If no one knows,

then I don’t know

if I might be

the villain.

I don’t trust the author anymore.





BAD DAY: 3


I’m sorry

I’m having another bad day.

My tongue is twisted my words come out

like venom.

I only use my armor when you frighten me.

Stuck in the middle of “I love you” and “I can’t take this anymore.”

These things they come and go and I mean half of everything I tell you.

I’m half of everything I hate, and half of anything I create is you too.

So I start to hate the poems when I hate you.





THE BAKER


I baked him a cake,

and now I watched him cut it open.

The first slice always falls apart.

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