Woman at diner who knew Fugazi, I wear all these pins on my denim jacket waiting for someone like you because a t-shirt isn’t loud enough.
Woman who knew Fugazi, waitress at diner, had “seen them twenty times,” without exaggeration—
with cracking olive skin and graying curly black hair to her shoulders,
the light refracting off my pin my friend bought at a record store in Philly reflecting her the image of a slender, voluptuous youth donned in fake leather worn Levis and beat Vans
shaking her mop of jet-black curly hair in a throng of like-minded dressed individuals in a dingy club angsty Washingtonians fleeing the Reagan Youth
mad at Capitalism mad at Middle Class, mad at Excess, Abuse, Malaise— driven by the furious punk rhythms of sweat-drenched Fugazi.
Woman who knew Fugazi, friends with Ian MacKaye, hadn’t seen him in years—
waitress at restaurant where the scrambled eggs are dry and the coffee is stale.