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people, protest FOR days.

I shouldn’t be drinking coffee.

I shouldn’t be reading the news.

It makes me anxious, and it’s not only the chemical interaction.

Somehow, I associate it with “adulthood”—reading the news,

Drinking coffee—I can’t tell you how many days of the last few

Years have been spent entirely in this fashion. The coffee

Growing cold and the news colder still. I don’t even taste the

black, fluid drops. I don’t hear the screams of people I read

about. I just want to hold on to something—so I raise the glass

to my lips. I can’t say

 

the shocking words when my mouth’s full; I can’t tell

 

about my experience, my privilege, when I’m drinking it.

 

 

The production of the commodity

 

creates a line from some equatorial region

to central America, and my mouth.

I think about the Autumn I worked in a corn-seed

sorting facility. What a short experience—

and yet,

something that weighs heavy on my imagination.

I was a temp worker.

I chose to work there out of shame and guilt for having

missed the deadline for college enrollment.

I could have done anything else; but there were people

there who wanted nothing more than a job. They needed

to be

there.

And I think of the people involved in producing coffee beans

 

in much the same way.

Removed

from the thing they’re making, as the raw materials are shipped

to places you pay workers more.

Why shouldn’t I swallow with difficulty when faced with the pro-

spect of a person supporting their entire family with the type

of work

I did

reflexively, as a choice?

 

Now I sit here, reading about North African riots,

a region, where coffee is produced—

ARABICA COFFEE— and I think about what’s sitting

in my cup, how I have

spent more money than they make in a day

to buy

one container

…

and sit here

for an afternoon

doing nothing but reading about their families’ misery.

 

I am a human parasite.

 

And like the bedbugs that have crawled meticulously

between my mattress and bedframe, hiding in a safe spot

until they can come out, undetected, and **** my potency.

 

I sit here, in the comfort of an apartment furnished

and paid for by my father who grows corn in a highly-

mechanized, agricultural society. I take more and more,

festering to the size of a blistering, red dot

blinking in the dark, in the form of the record light on

my voice recorder.

I expect so much more from myself, simply because of

this position of luxury.

 

But I don’t take time to think about my reaction to these

stories or how I am involved in them, in shaping their plots.

I’m even eating more now

as I’ve nearly lost my concern with avoiding certain super-

markets.

I smile at the greeters, make small talk with the cashiers

whom I am openly exploiting. But it’s ok, because

I worked for a month at a cornseed manufacturing

facility

and I read Marxist Ideology,

and I know about the Arab Spring

and I was against American intervention in Libya

and I disdain the air strikes from robotic planes

(unauthorized by congress)

and I disdain congress

and I support gay marriage

(I stopped eating chicken).

I don’t drive to the suburbs of my city.

I walk and ride my bicycle as much as I feel like.

I use public transportation at times.

I try to get to know women.

I practiced safe *** once.

I write poetry.

I tell my mom I love her.

I bought my nieces birthday presents.

I’m not overly nice to people of different

ethnicities.

I voted for Obama.

I’m trying.

All these things make it seem less bad

to smile at the cashier.

But then I think about my black studies Professor

who used a walker to come to class

because she fell

and spelled the word Amendment “Admendment”

on the board when talking about Reconstruction.

I think about the war in Syria.

I think of people dying from cholera in Haiti, in 2012

A.D.

I think about fracking and oil spills and …

irrevocable damage to Indian reservations.

I think about football coaches molesting children

and people eating fried butter.

I read about people

upset

with a movie

who protest in the streets for days.

 

It makes me realize I shouldn’t smile at anyone.

I shouldn’t be drinking coffee.

I shouldn’t be reading the news.

Request permission to use this poem
Written by
sansara-justinovich
American
Published
Sep 21, 2012
Lines·Words
109·736
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