Every night brushing my teeth, I walk as I have since
grade school into the loft attached to the bathroom, and as sudsy white drools down my face, I stare at the bookcases jammed with titles distending shelves. And every night it is the same.
Manic glee. Feral frustration. Immense sadness.
Because at every approach, I feel dynamite strapped beneath
my ribcage, timer counting down, reaching zero before my hands reach half the shelves. Fuck physics. I want to read them all. At the same time. Now.
If they were grapes I’d throw them into my mouth, oozy, pulpy
handfuls, and when purple shoots from my eyes, I’ll throw the rest on the ground and stomp wildly, mashing ink
into wine, sucking the white
carpet so dry I won’t leave a stain.
Then inebriated with words swirling through intestines and splintering through veins, constructing libraries among organelles, these books will surround
the dynamite, coat it, unable to slow its race but able to welcome the inevitable like
New Years— with arms wide, shouting greetings, kissing its cheek, hugging its neck, throwing
confetti into the unknown.
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