There’s a feeling one gets oftentimes evoked when people wear clothes too tight for their skin or hotels by the ocean that have pools and you wonder if the pool gets jealous does its’ hands get clammy does its’ mouth quiver with wondering why it tastes so much like bleach and if it feels as exposed as a schoolboy’s battered knees after Sunday mass and the feeling is reiterated once more this cramp of the foot, this skipped heartbeat you become so fixated on As you watch the old man on the crowded subway pick at his scabs, the ones he got when he was 23 or 24 he can’t quite remember anymore but it’s hard to remember such fine details when your clothes smell like ***** and your children don’t visit anymore so now he’ll sit on anything that moves as long as it propels him forward as long as he doesn’t have to see the wrinkles in between the birthday cakes and the heart medicine that he’s supposed to take but what’s a chemical to a heart and what’s a heart to an electrical socket someone with a medical degree keeps poking at so this feeling starts getting a name, starts calling cabs and giving them fake addresses starts moving in and calling itself mister Al on week days and Sister Wendy on the rest and now the soap stops cleaning and your hands becoming red with scrubbing some internal message you were supposed to detonate as soon As you graduated college but the degree was burned in a fire and all the things you were taught were sold at half price in local yard sales and so you stop eating dessert for dinner and stop living and start recollecting, start rewinding the past, time traveling back to a time when the sun would hit your eyes as you walked crooked streets the pavement cracking like frost of a glacier in mid September under your feet and as your voice gets low you smell the scent of lilac flowers in a basket carried by a woman in threads of agave and cotton, colorful shawls draped Across her bare arms, wearing rosaries in both her hands chanting words that you could almost know but you don’t, asking if you’ll buy the flowers made by the tears of god, crafted by the arthritic hands of mother Mary and Don’t you just love the virginal white of martyrdom but there are stones being thrown across the street by rude boys in t-shirts long enough to be dresses, jeweled numbers on their backs like football players or prison inmates and the distinction is not as clear as they ricochet off the tough brown skin of the woman you begin seeing embers of scarlet and it’s beautiful in the way the slaughter of a thousand roses by the hands of scissors is beautiful but the taste of disgust is not far behind, and you wish the lilacs were a shield of ivory armor And you wish the boys were boys and not men there’s a feeling one gets and I’m afraid you’ll always feel the feeling like the peel of a peach