Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
There will come a day, probably a Tuesday, you'll be hoeing and yanking yellow weeds by the handful, the sun in the center of the sky; Or you'll be climbing through your lover's window while her husband unlocks the front door, thinking to yourself, "Jesus, we didn't even do anything today. Just gave her her insulin shot," and your heart no longer pumps so much as begs, begs for silence, but that's funny, isn't it? because there isn't any sound, only the perceived dissonance of a scattered mind; But maybe, if you're lucky, it'll be at night, the two of you in bed, and she'll timidly ask if you're hungry, and you'll say what you always say to that question: yes, yes I am, and she'll ask if you want a sandwich, and you'll say, "I'll get it." "You're too sweet." "It's not a problem." After spreading the mustard, there'll be a pain in your chest, mild at first, just at first, but by the time you get halfway down the hall you'll drop the plate of sandwiches on the floor and ***** in the toilet, and you'll probably know then what's happening; But what did you ever do to earn that kind of quiet, relatively quiet, ending? You've got a few things in mind, but you've got a few more bad that negate any kudos any kind of god would award, so let's be honest. That's what you want, right? Death will wake you up, probably around 6 because you've never been a morning person, and when you wake it won't be from a feeling, like a physiological manifestation, no, no that'd give you time to remember Mom in the hospital when she called you by the wrong name. No, Death will come in the form of a headache, and if your wife was there she'd already be up, and she'd say something like: "Poor baby," and get the Tylenol out of the cabinet to the left of the sink for you, but she's not there, is she? No, she's living with her sister right now while you "figure yourself out" and your kids, two boys and a girl, all grown with families of their own, think you've been selfish, but what was the word you countered with? "Necessary." Yes, it's necessary, you'll think as you pop three pills in and run your mouth under the facet, and you'll collapse, pills rolling across the floor, stopping under the cabinets where no one will ever find them. Your vision will burn white; it won't fade to black like you thought, and your head, Jesus, your head sounds like tools in a dryer, but you know there is no sound, and this is it, this is honestly it, you alone on the floor in nothing but your grey boxer shorts, the ones riddled with holes that your wife told you to throw out, and a fragmented halo of Tylenol around you. Your wife. Your wife. Your wife. Your wife. You'll say her name, you'll say "Eve," and your mouth will close itself, and your fist will unclench itself, and you know what? That'll be it, to borrow a phrase. Nobody will find you for three days, and even then, when they do, they'll wish they never had.
0
Mar 20, 2014
Mar 20, 2014 at 12:38 PM UTC
Probably a Tuesday
There will come a day, probably a Tuesday, you'll be hoeing and yanking yellow weeds by the handful, the sun in the center of the sky; Or you'll be climbing through your lover's window while her husband unlocks the front door, thinking to yourself, "Jesus, we didn't even do anything today. Just gave her her insulin shot," and your heart no longer pumps so much as begs, begs for silence, but that's funny, isn't it? because there isn't any sound, only the perceived dissonance of a scattered mind; But maybe, if you're lucky, it'll be at night, the two of you in bed, and she'll timidly ask if you're hungry, and you'll say what you always say to that question: yes, yes I am, and she'll ask if you want a sandwich, and you'll say, "I'll get it." "You're too sweet." "It's not a problem." After spreading the mustard, there'll be a pain in your chest, mild at first, just at first, but by the time you get halfway down the hall you'll drop the plate of sandwiches on the floor and ***** in the toilet, and you'll probably know then what's happening; But what did you ever do to earn that kind of quiet, relatively quiet, ending? You've got a few things in mind, but you've got a few more bad that negate any kudos any kind of god would award, so let's be honest. That's what you want, right? Death will wake you up, probably around 6 because you've never been a morning person, and when you wake it won't be from a feeling, like a physiological manifestation, no, no that'd give you time to remember Mom in the hospital when she called you by the wrong name. No, Death will come in the form of a headache, and if your wife was there she'd already be up, and she'd say something like: "Poor baby," and get the Tylenol out of the cabinet to the left of the sink for you, but she's not there, is she? No, she's living with her sister right now while you "figure yourself out" and your kids, two boys and a girl, all grown with families of their own, think you've been selfish, but what was the word you countered with? "Necessary." Yes, it's necessary, you'll think as you pop three pills in and run your mouth under the facet, and you'll collapse, pills rolling across the floor, stopping under the cabinets where no one will ever find them. Your vision will burn white; it won't fade to black like you thought, and your head, Jesus, your head sounds like tools in a dryer, but you know there is no sound, and this is it, this is honestly it, you alone on the floor in nothing but your grey boxer shorts, the ones riddled with holes that your wife told you to throw out, and a fragmented halo of Tylenol around you. Your wife. Your wife. Your wife. Your wife. You'll say her name, you'll say "Eve," and your mouth will close itself, and your fist will unclench itself, and you know what? That'll be it, to borrow a phrase. Nobody will find you for three days, and even then, when they do, they'll wish they never had.
jj-hutton
Written by
American
Mar 20, 2014
Mar 20, 2014 at 12:38 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem