Driving there the trees start to look like my old baby teeth and my skin starts to feel like the bruises of a mother I have not spoken to in three years. There people sit in their striped foldout beach chairs in the parking lots of gas stations and watch the cars go by and the women wear dresses covered in flowers that swell like skeletons down to their ankles and the dogs when they bark sound like stretched out skies.
Summers until I was 17 spent there in the lake, the lake where for the first time I held my breath for ten whole seconds and where Tommy from across the street drowned himself and where for two weeks I couldn’t swim without crying from the panic that bloated and ballooned out in the cryptic wells of my chest. Until I
was 17 there within the walls of the house painted white as a canker sore and in my bedroom lying on the wooden floors my belly the first time you came was too bare and too large and after that I did not speak to you for a week and when I finally opened my mouth I couldn’t stop crying, my face swollen as fish roe, and I never loved you more, and then
I never loved you more than I did on my porch for the last time, you standing there looking gauntly and saintly as a bruise and me with hunched shoulders, I couldn’t stop shaking, I never stopped shaking, here I am in this car and it is air-conditioned and I am still shaking.
nostalgia // i saw iron & wine and he played a new song and the lyrics were rly good and this is what happened afterwards