i fall asleep in the back of ubers, to the sounds of middle-aged drivers talking to their loved ones giving advice, the smell of spice, my temple on the window just playing a mental jeopardy with the meanings behind those accented words of languages i don't understand perhaps, once upon a time, i did, but now, no longer
i sleep like a stranger in my own home, climbing into my bed without caution, with atrophying bones it's a debilitating exhaustion, it's characteristic of aging of falling and forgetting about the friendships and benefits that broke through my bed slats, plus the flash-lit attempts to fix the unfixable with feminist texts and crumpled cash
i dream about my mother as another, and her neck remains untouched, perhaps only adorned with pearls so wide, and so bright, and the garage door is always unlocked it's comfort, it's nostalgia, it's the furthest i've been from home and when the radio turns on, i wake to unfamiliar laughter, and "i miss my dog, and i miss falling in love," and everything's amiss and all i can do is sit here, tipping a stranger as i reminisce