you’re staring at a wrench display in a failing sears 10 minutes before closing and don’t recognize the reflection in the stainless steel. you’ve been here a million times, run your fingers along band saws a million times, memorized the store’s playlist, learned “Love Hurts" by Nazareth but you’re still trying to find something that connects, something to retrace the steps to what pushed you out the door, placed cold hands in empty pockets, made you stop to buy cigarettes and brought you here again. your blood pumps slower in places of transition, only walked through to get to the mall or back through to poorly parked cars and you know a lot about being used to move on but left behind. an employee asks if you’re alright and you say yes because you know they’re running out their shift and don’t want to deal with your **** and how could you tell them that today, your skin feels foreign. maybe you’ll find something in winter coats and blackout curtains but until then you make a home on a display mattress because you only live in liminal spaces. you’re only grounded between phases, in inbetweens. you rely on uncertainty and in this economy, the sears might be gone before you realize you’ll miss it.
"love hurts by Nazareth seeps through the speakers inside of Sears."
- Julia Champagne "By Nazareth"
if you've been inside a sears at any point after like, 2011, i think you'll agree it's an otherworldly experience in the worst ******* way. we all find comfort in weird places sometimes though.