Check off all these belongings from a list that I wrote in thick blue marker on a cardboard strip I ripped
There's a book I lost at 26 with dog-eared pages fading gold 16 pens, 45 cents a dented tin of birthday cards unnumbered rolls of mints
Sit back on the carpet in the heat take another sip and press on to the bottom. To the green.
There's a look you had at 28 with bow shaped mouth and arching eyes 15 hours, many road trips your crooked tooth would slant your grin Never saw me fall right in.
And today I pace apartment floors or sit amidst a box flap hall halted breath, an iron hour clad in sweat, still packed away in taped up, cardboard yesterday
There's a photograph, from 2010 atop the slippers that you gave. Raging smiles, orange lights at night. The River Walk in wintertime. And it's my favourite pic.
But the 21st was moving day and all I've got are pickled dreams, an empty house and waiting boxes, "Tear my guts out," so they say.
No fight quite like a duct taped box. No companion like your face. No shrink quite like an empty bottle. No wake-up call like moving day.
Yes. Mea Culpa: the title of this piece is an allusion to a song by The Honor System.