Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
The mums at nursery like me. They are reassured by dark rings beneath my eyes, blue jeans, clean-scrubbed smile, pulled back hair. A soul more boring and more tired- Just knowing I exist makes them feel better. Not today: Today I’m wearing make-up. And my shorts are, well, short which I think is against the rules. My hair shines like a barley sugar sweet and my finger nails sparkle like long forgotten jewels. Today I dodge dressing-up hats, snotty noses, spilt milk, play-dough, paint and mud-puddle splats with practiced precision. Today, just this once, when I give mums their children back, I look more together and more stylish than them. I run home, cross busy roads in record time, wave to total strangers who want to say hello. I get the polish off my nails, scrub my face under the shower, dry my hair, pull it back, grab yesterday’s jeans and baggy sweater. He returns from work and asks: Did you have a good day? I think: *Yes. Yes **** it. Yes I did.* Do you know- my eyes are pretty, and I can get into shorts I wore ten years ago? Stop traffic - check. Turn heads - hell yeah! The roofer down the road nearly fell and broke his neck. Your wife is, without a doubt, a ********* **** thing.* So many words, like popping candy on my tongue. I imagine his reaction. I shut my mouth. Danger passes. But lies won’t come. Mouth’s gone dry. I swallow back the truth then feel like I’m gonna gag. Panic rising in my chest on top of bile. Then: My day was fine I say. Just that. My day was fine And I am saved.
0
Oct 14, 2011
Oct 14, 2011 at 3:08 PM UTC
finding words
The mums at nursery like me. They are reassured by dark rings beneath my eyes, blue jeans, clean-scrubbed smile, pulled back hair. A soul more boring and more tired- Just knowing I exist makes them feel better. Not today: Today I’m wearing make-up. And my shorts are, well, short which I think is against the rules. My hair shines like a barley sugar sweet and my finger nails sparkle like long forgotten jewels. Today I dodge dressing-up hats, snotty noses, spilt milk, play-dough, paint and mud-puddle splats with practiced precision. Today, just this once, when I give mums their children back, I look more together and more stylish than them. I run home, cross busy roads in record time, wave to total strangers who want to say hello. I get the polish off my nails, scrub my face under the shower, dry my hair, pull it back, grab yesterday’s jeans and baggy sweater. He returns from work and asks: Did you have a good day? I think: *Yes. Yes **** it. Yes I did.* Do you know- my eyes are pretty, and I can get into shorts I wore ten years ago? Stop traffic - check. Turn heads - hell yeah! The roofer down the road nearly fell and broke his neck. Your wife is, without a doubt, a ********* **** thing.* So many words, like popping candy on my tongue. I imagine his reaction. I shut my mouth. Danger passes. But lies won’t come. Mouth’s gone dry. I swallow back the truth then feel like I’m gonna gag. Panic rising in my chest on top of bile. Then: My day was fine I say. Just that. My day was fine And I am saved.
ju
Written by
Oct 14, 2011
Oct 14, 2011 at 3:08 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem