I’m not good enough to write this poem. these ******* words won’t come. here I am, feeling like a dried **** on the grass— all hard, white and shriveled obstinately sitting there, surrounded by all that lush green. this resistance is a real *******, sitting on me like a sumo wrestler, smiling in its power over me. looking down on me and controlling me effortlessly.
“you can’t write poetry, you’re a nobody. a real lukewarm leftover special. no one will ever love you. no one will ever like you. no one will ever see you. no one wants you to succeed. no one wants to read your poetry. don’t waste your time doing something you’ll never be good at. you’re not good enough. you’re not strong enough. someone like you could never be someone like that. someone like you could never do something like that. someone like her would never love someone like you. you’re gross, nobody wants to look at you. stay home. don’t do anything. don’t even try. give up.”
I mean, this guy’s got a million of these bumper stickers and he slaps them all over the inside of my car all day, every day— that is, when he’s not using my chest as a seat cushion. it’s gotten to the point where I now can’t see out of my windshield. I just wanna go somewhere but he won’t let me see where I’m going. he won’t stop talking. I can’t hear the music anymore. I don’t know where I am. I can’t breathe. I just know that this car feels more like solitary confinement than freedom and the a/c stopped working a long time ago.
I think I need to stop the car. I need to open the door and step out into the light. I don’t even need to take off the bumper stickers, I think I just need to walk for a while— move at my natural rhythm again. like children do before we start in on them. before we start building their car around them and teaching them to believe in it.
this is you. you are this car. except when you’re alone, then maybe you can leave the car but never in public, never in front of other people. this car will protect you from them, from the world— from yourself. hide in it.
well, I left my car on the side of the road some ways back with the keys in it and a full tank of gas. the door’s open, take it if you need it. hell, take it if you want it, I don’t give a ****— just don’t try to pick me up in it if you ever catch up.