it's four pm sunday afternoon and in an unforeseen turn of events i'm awake
guess i've slept so long i couldn't nap away one more afternoon
remembering how on friday waiting at the bus stop a library employee walked up to me and said
"would you like a poem?" and handed me a note card
and on it was printed a poem and a reminder that april was national poetry month
it reminded me what i've known for far too long
that there are words inside me clawing tooth and nail
trying to get out and i have to let them
so today it's sunday afternoon and i'm thinking about how sunday afternooons aren't what they used to be
they started out in the backseat of a blue dodge van crammed between my brothers npr on the radio i hated car talk but loved to hear the way my dad laughed at what couldn’t possibly be jokes not since it wasn’t funny
but after car talk came prairie home companion garrison keillor's gravel serenade of life in lake woebegone static bluegrass the drama of guy noir the hilarity of tom keith and fred newman playing ping pong with airplanes dive bombing overhead
winding up around the lake through the corn fields until we got to grandma’s house
afternoons turned into evenings and i would fall asleep in the backseat on the way home staring upside down out the window at the incandescent orange street lights barely bright enough to cast more light than the stars treetops dissolving into the dark sky
i always thought it was fascinating how it everything looked different from that angle in the dark
sunday afternoons turned into dashing around the church grounds unattended picking up deer bones in the back lot and throwing them into the pond eventually removing screens from windows and climbing out onto the roof
we got older turned into teenagers lazy summer days a memory so soaked in sugary pink lemonade mix i can't help but scrape my teeth remembering the taste of citric acid and innocence
how we thought we were so grown up but i'd give anything to be that kid again
i wish we’d gone on more trips to the mall before the shops were dead husks a fallen ozymandias to the promise of capitalism when there were shoe stores and book stores and a radio shack and a gertrude hawk
we would spend ages in the bath and body works smelling and calculating how much body spray we had to buy between ourselves to get the most out of our coupon exchanging the bills and bottles in the food court across from the sears years and years before it would become a post apocalyptic vaccination center of folding chairs and masked queues
before i lost them to the split paths adulthood takes us all down
i wish i'd known what i know now that no matter how bad it feels in my own head it's never a death sentence it will come and go
i wish i’d known that none of it would last
sunday afternoons the in-between washing my hair while my friends went with my parents to church
i don't go to church don't think i ever will again even though i wonder if the sense of community would help
it's sunday afternoon but it's not how sunday afternoons used to be with johnny cash on a loop as i lost myself in empty cardboard boxes straight lines of dusty wine bottles shattered pints of gin on gritty concrete
sunday morning coming down but it never felt like coming down it felt as close to peace and quiet as i could get
sunday afternoons turned to hazy piles of navy duvet and dr teals scented sheets but i can’t do that anymore i’ve wasted enough time trying to sleep out my own thoughts
so i'm trying to let myself remember let the words out one afternoon at a time
something about this sunday afternoon feels like how they used to be
an indigo country playlist on the tv all alone with my herbal tea the candle burning is lilac and violet i'm starting to think i could find a way to heal
i'm not writing this poem for it to be good i'm writing it because if i don't i might slip down with the raindrops into the drainage grate never to be seen again
i have to let my past wrap itself into my future or i'll lose the parts of myself that brought me to here
there’s something about having the window open while it rains that tells me it’s going to be all right something about how the library bells still ring just off the hour that reminds me
how time passes how sunday afternoons have changed and i’m sure they will change again soon and what a relief that is