I was louder once. A beast with a need to feast, but now I tamp my rampages. One too many times I leapt Over and through the fire Bounding and barreling Obnoxiously snarling as I caught my dreams between my jaws and ripped, To find their warmth evaporating, my **** growing cold and sticky as it would dribble and dry, sweet and cracked down my breast and forearms. I learned to pace. To release. To settle. Not to take too many shots, coax, tease, or purr. Not to bite, howl, or grin. Not to get too cozy when I stargaze, tell embarrassing drinking stories, or speak my impressing words. Not to stand on tables, Not to shout out of car windows, Not to dance like the drunken Maynads. And I am quieter for it. More intact. Less alive. I miss that wild beast. I feel her gnawing at the cracks in my skin begging me to don the wolf coat. And some nights, When the moon is right I do. And if I'm not careful, Fastidiously luring and caging her with promises of "next time" until I've re-sewn my skin I'm afraid that she'll eclipse me, Careening through the night And never returning. I along with her Never to return.
10.7.17 Inktober Prompt: Shy Rules: The poem is whatever comes out of the pen, no edits allowed.
This poem is a bit of a response to my popular "I Am Loud" poem. Things have changed.