It's a small bar,
with old wooden tables
and no music:
I like to get a break sometimes
and I come here every Sunday
after my CBT sessions.
The waitress smiles.
She is Spanish too but
(it's that white mist
taking over my mind again)
I can't articulate
and I just speak English,
hoping she doesn't notice
my accent.
When she brings me
a dark decaf coffee,
even if I have asked
for a decaf tea,
and I taste it,
and it tastes horrible,
I lose balance and stumble
for a moment
("you are going to fail",
and "this is all your fault",
and "just let it go, don't move,
it'll pass").
It is such a small detail
in the grand scheme of things,
but this decaf coffee, this black mist,
makes me feel that
there is something wrong with me.
I look through the window:
across the road, a student residence,
all windows and shining glass.
A girl goes up the stairs
with a blue basket in her hands;
she is probably doing the laundry.
Another girl leans on the sill,
and smokes. I invent a life for them,
and it's a good life - a life to praise.
I want to go back to Uni, I think,
and for a moment I feel safe, and warm.
("Never mind,
I'm too old, after all").
I pay for the coffee and leave.
In two hours, she'll have clean clothes,
and I don't know where I'll be
(especially on days like these,
when my mind feels heavy,
and weak).
Apr 22, 2017
Apr 22, 2017 at 3:56 PM UTC
It's a small bar,
with old wooden tables
and no music:
I like to get a break sometimes
and I come here every Sunday
after my CBT sessions.
The waitress smiles.
She is Spanish too but
(it's that white mist
taking over my mind again)
I can't articulate
and I just speak English,
hoping she doesn't notice
my accent.
When she brings me
a dark decaf coffee,
even if I have asked
for a decaf tea,
and I taste it,
and it tastes horrible,
I lose balance and stumble
for a moment
("you are going to fail",
and "this is all your fault",
and "just let it go, don't move,
it'll pass").
It is such a small detail
in the grand scheme of things,
but this decaf coffee, this black mist,
makes me feel that
there is something wrong with me.
I look through the window:
across the road, a student residence,
all windows and shining glass.
A girl goes up the stairs
with a blue basket in her hands;
she is probably doing the laundry.
Another girl leans on the sill,
and smokes. I invent a life for them,
and it's a good life - a life to praise.
I want to go back to Uni, I think,
and for a moment I feel safe, and warm.
("Never mind,
I'm too old, after all").
I pay for the coffee and leave.
In two hours, she'll have clean clothes,
and I don't know where I'll be
(especially on days like these,
when my mind feels heavy,
and weak).
Sometimes I wish I had more certainties. When I was in college, the future looked much more defined.