The fridge droned between the sound of her impaired footsteps across the 600 grit linoleum floor. She ran my palms against the cave-like walls. Eroded paint bubbling like balloons before bursting, flattening beneath her touch. She felt the key rack with more keys than a piano store, cork board with porcupine thumbtacks, and the thin edge of the Disney calendar beside the light switch. Patting the blood off on her pant leg, she flipped the switch. With her sleeve, she brushed crushed Oreos from the table and sat. Scatted about the stained mahogany was a few National ENQUIRER subscription cards, used napkins, and an overdue bank notice. Sliding the chair back, she sulked to the switch and flipped it back.
A poem about tough times and how we'd rather just not know we're going through them.