My pen is leaking ink pooling into my pocket protector the one I’ve had since before the new math My uncle gave it to me – I remember it’s got the logo of his insurance company on it. that and, now the ink stain.
Ink running through the cracks in the pocket protector leaking where uncle’s meat thermometer pushed through tight plastic staining a once yellow shirt
Stopping by the dry-cleaner for pick up the vendor says she couldn’t get it all out but it’s better than it was. Hands me a small plastic sandwich bag filled with strips of paper the size of those you see on magnets for fridge poems
“Don’t know where these came from” she says, “****** near ruined my dryer spinning around there – clogging up the air exhaust”
words…… I whisper under my breath
From the ink. The words in the pen would not go unnoticed.
I pay her – grab my shirt, my jacket, my tie grab the baggie of words in no particular order thank her and with the welcome bell’s ding I head into the street a very satisfied customer
****** pen is still leaking by the time I get home It’s leaking tears by now tears that fill the ink well of my memory dip and scribble dip and scribble
Thoughts almost painful long forgotten or so I thought Last days on Brunswick Avenue knowing I would have to return to school emptying that huge street-facing bedroom I got a lot of miles looking out of those windows if I wrote a lot I don’t remember Late nights, very early mornings listening to the hourly chime of that nameless clock that made up the entire downtown Toronto skyline back in the day
The words that dotted the paper sometimes sometimes made no sense my friends politely remarking “That’s good. I like it” were unhelpful
Further future desperation wasn’t far just need a receipt or a bar napkin or a box from a Big Mac ripped into 4x2x1x2x4 whatever I could get my hands on just trying to appease the leaking pen from getting too far ahead of my regretful memory.
IOUs, shopping lists, debits to society love poems, goodbye notes, “I miss you” they’re all there, we just have to remember what they are
Words write themselves. The ink, the tears the blood, the fridge magnets have already formed the words. I am the one with the ideas when I meet a new lover or fall out of favour with an “ex” – yet again or attempt to describe three shades of orange or when I want to remember to pick up pickles
They are stuck in the pen until I am ****** good and ready with the roll of the ball-point to see where the words land this time.
drip drip drip
Written as part of a pandemic poetry group from Jun 2020. We challenged one another to various formats and "themes". I think this one was to "write about writing". Alas, the pocket protector and the insurance company are my doing.