When my mother weeps at my books of poetry, when my father denies ever having a claim on me -- that's when you'll know I was a black sheep.
The rooms -- grey, filter-feeding off my teetering sanity-- shrivel with my crippled ambition, I've seen the backrooms, full of aching flesh; I've seen the bathrooms, full of ***** and proud boys, I've been the "self-proclaimed ******* of my generation"; I've driven women to the same ***, but all my memories burn madly -- their lessons turn to smoke, kiss my nostrils-- leave me alone just long enough for a therapeutic winter -- full of wine and an earnest-eyed love.
When my lioness needs to roam, When my best friends turn runner-up -- that's when you'll tell me, "you've done this to yourself".
The fields -- flattened by snarling winds and preying beasts -- provide a place to lay my head, I've wailed at the wall; I've murdered the crying crow, I've been Delilah'd; I've driven to the dark corners -- hiding from illuminating eyes -- but time reoccurs like a small town parade -- the old men become cartoons in tiny cars, the beauty queens never age, the horses always **** the pavement, and we ignorantly track in it -- bringing it to the heirloom rugs and beige carpet, only to spend the rest of our lives cleaning.