have you ever looked at a house and felt a crippling pain that you couldn’t go in it?
i have every day i see my own front porch and every day i see the house still in someone else’s name but not for much longer
the first hurt is raw ripping and searing through my heart and running into hot cinnamon fire tears burning my cheeks
the second hurt is dull stinging like a badly sharpened knife over skin or knowing what your birthday present is but having to wait while not letting on you know
i grew accustomed to the custom of becoming myself in this house but the walls i grew up in grew inward too tightly around me to choke me
and still i have a pillow to bury my face in at night a shower to wash off the day dust a kitchen to stand in when i’m feeling a bit lost
but lost is the only feeling i have when i’m here in this house
i don’t live here anymore
i live on my feet behind counters through the parking lot and up the sidewalk
slipping in before the sun is up and dragging out when others are in bed
feeling small on a dull afternoon when i can only curl up on the couch to think and wait
time in between that’s now
time between shifts and time between living in my house and finding my home
it’s not so much the waiting game it’s the feeling that i’m alone
that nobody wants me
so close and yet so far almost there but stuck here
just keep the worn floors clean music playing and make sure the janky old doors are locked at night
this is my town this is my home now
this town will take care of me
as i’m wandering through it halfway homeless
copyright 4/219 by b. e. mccomb
the second the paperwork goes through i’m leaving for good