there’s that sinking feeling again— a disease of stories about growing up spread from mouth to mouth like fever blisters being passed around a school, but you don't believe them.
don’t worry, later they can cut it out, surgically replacing inhibition and the feeling that we’ve already ruined everything with hope, a reverie waiting to be end.
spools of yarn roll out from the old textile mill. we gather them and store every bit behind our teeth— leaving us deaf and dumb with little to do but watch and wait for that queasy feeling to leave.
it never does,
and i’m tired.
so i’ll swallow the knots that form in my throat and let them cluster together into a confused mass that grows malignant.
every moment cataloged and thrown away.
residue collecting in the grooves of a worn limbic system.