Today I straightened all of the hairs on my head whether they needed it or not. I like being organized. Ironing out the kinks in my leather jacket with a baseball bat. I try to cut the blues from the spinning record, flicked numbered matchsticks across vinyl to set the fleshed room on fire, don’t touch me, I’m a real live wire.
Being on top of my **** is like handmaking beeswax candles, I twist & turn, carving wax in the air—There is always more to do, I always tried to cross t’s and sort the junk mail from the paychecks, accidentally dropping cigarettes into the piles of post.
Out of the corner of my eye, I watched you lick postage stamps for the outgoing flood. The laundry gets done even though I’m too tired to pull my key out of the door.
I am in control of my own destiny.
I smoke Coca Cola & drink cigarettes for breakfast because I don’t roll out of bed on the right side of any given day, and yesterday I put my foot through the television because tap-dancing on the shards of the wood-paneled tube from dad’s first marriage sings gnashed-teeth harmonies with the microwave’s low groan at 3AM—
I used to eat cold spaghetti in torn jeans and nothing else while you flipped through channels on basic cable to hear the collage painting the end of the world. You were always an empty can that year, you saved orange peels to fill with oil to burn— your name whispers itself into the grease hissings and I hear it over the skyline and I cannot seem to find a match to strike to light the last crumpled smoke in my pack—
All I want to do is send you photographs with singed corners, photographs of your letters, attempts to burn away any sight of you, ways to cut&bin;; the flint that ignites the only bonfire in my eye.
And sometimes I wish I could just scream at you until the flowers crawl up the brick walls of your apartment; my kitchen smells concrete like celluloid ashes and if I snap my fingers to break broken promises and floss my teeth with violin strings I might not miss you anymore.