Parallax
My memory has been good to you since you left.
It's taken you and buffed your sharp edges,
polished up your one-liners,
and edited your conversations for wit and sensitivity.
It's rationalized your selfishness and rather quick temper,
forgotten how you hated sharing a single bed,
inconvenience in general.
It even injects feeling into your empty phrases.
You'd love my memory of you.
So I wouldn't advise you to come back.
You could never compete with this memory of mine.
Even your eyes aren't that blue.
Nostalgia.
I was raised just outside a small town, in a house full of family, and a backyard full of cats. The majority of my childhood had been spent on an acre of land surrounded by agricultural fields and open sky. Black clouds of birds soared among the treetops, raccoons scurried into scraggly bushes, and badgers curled up in warm, dark corners on this seemingly large acre of land. I spent my time running barefoot across the gravel driveway or laying in the sun with a cat, or three, curled up on my chest. With the abundance of nature’s distractions on this single acre of land, all squiggling, and scurrying, and squawking, my childhood was anything but dull.
I watched almost ten years pass as the methodical process of conventional agriculture occurred around me. Each spring almost endless lines of trucks, tractors, and farmers would appear on our acre, humming and pointing before climbing up into their booming, noxious machines to roar across the terrain. They would drag the sharp slender fingers of their plows over the earth, scraping deep furrows to pour in delicate yellow seeds. My sisters and I would be mesmerized as the fragile shoots of pale green cornstalks would push through the dark soil of the Midwest, reaching for the sun with outstretched hands. One day they were barely tall enough to brush against our ankles, but a good rainfall was all it took for them to shoot up to our waists. Eventually their saffron heads stretched far above where my hands could reach and their vibrant yellow would block out the sun.
My sisters and I spent long afternoons exploring that corn field, running and yelling for one another, despite our parent’s attempt to scare us from going in. They always told us that the field was like a maze and we would never make it out if we lost our way. We ignored their warnings and still managed to emerge from the field every night, right before sunset when our mom was yelling “Dinner’s ready!” from the kitchen window. We would tumble through the doorway and our parents would ask what we had been doing all day, even though the bits of tassels stuck in our hair and red rashes on our necks and arms would always give us away.
Summer brought with it hot winds and brittle grass; bronze shoulders and bleached hair. In the cooler mornings my mother and I would be bent over a patch of soft tilled earth in the yard, digging furrows of our own to fill with small, smooth seeds. Before long, sweet corn swayed in the warm breeze and we were plucking swollen tomatoes, slender green beans, and pea pods that were ready to burst. Juicy wild strawberries danced around the boundaries of the garden and pastel red apples hung low on the branches. As the summer evenings dwindled away, we diligently canned and preserved as much of the surplus as we could. These precious cans would last us through the harsh winter months when making the ten-mile trip into town wasn’t safe.
By the time fall emerged, the cornstalks in the field around us had turned a crisp gold hue and chattered and swished in the wind. Soon the trucks, tractors, and farmers returned in an even bigger frenzy than before. I watched the golden stalks slowly disappear until all that remained were the crushed leaves and a sprinkling of corn across the earth. The tree leaves transformed from greens to yellows, reds, and purples, before curling up and drifting from their comfortable positions among the sky to the thick grass below. The cool fall winds picked the leaves up and spun them across the yard before shooing them into still corners. My boots crunched through them, stirring their light bodies to flutter and drift away. Colorful beds made of leaves dotted the yard and I dashed across the grass to take turns jumping into each one.
Cold winter gusts promptly whisked the leaves away and instead replaced them with four-foot snow drifts. Ice dribbled off the roof and puffs of frost spread across the windows. The freezing winds howled and the house groaned and creaked from the strain, but we hardly noticed. Hot chocolate simmered on the stove and Christmas lights twinkled on the tree laden with ornaments and tinsel. Once the last snowball had been thrown we all tramped back inside, stomping our boots and shaking free the flurries that had gathered on our heads and shoulders. The sudden heat caused our cheeks to flush and our fingers tingled with satisfaction.
As I matured from an adolescent into a young woman, I found myself packing up my childhood into neat little boxes before they were loaded into a truck and sent to a new home. The magic of the one small acre had run its course and soon we were nestled into a three story home in the middle of town. There was no longer a backyard full of cats or black clouds of birds among the treetops, but instead a backyard full of hostas and streams of electrical cables stretching across the sky.
It’s odd to think about The Move now because I don’t remember being overcome with emotion as family friends loaded boxes of my clothes and stuffed animals into trucks and cars. I don’t recall tossing in my bed to pass sleepless nights as I mourned the land that I had grown up on and fallen in love with. In fact, I don’t remember feeling many emotions at all. I remember the dread of having to move boxes all day but it was quickly diffused with the sweetness of donuts. I remember the golden streams of sunlight stretching through the emptying house.
Were there tears rolling down my cheeks as I kissed every single cat and kitten we had raised since birth one last time before handing them to their new owners? Did I run my hands through the tall, swaying grasses or wiggle my toes in the dark muddy soil before pulling out of that driveway for the last time? Maybe my childhood naivety had spared me that sorrow because even writing these words now, eleven years later, I feel the sickness in my stomach knowing exactly what I had given up when we left that small acre.
Many seasons passed before I ever visited that place again. I usually spent my summers back in that small town helping my dad with his contracting business by cleaning and painting apartments. It was hot and dirty work, but he paid me twelve dollars an hour so I didn’t complain. I drove to and from the apartments every day for weeks and every time I crested over that last hill I felt an old habit pulling at my hands on the wheel. There was our old acre of land sitting alone on the hill overlooking the rolling farmland around it. I always had to catch myself from slowing down and pulling into the driveway, as though I was home.
Pieces of that acre had been vanishing over the years since we moved. The beautiful eastern red cedars and tall spruce that used to outline the property had long ago disappeared and in their place were rows of corn. I remember climbing up their sticky trunks just to sit among their full heads of needles and poke at busy ants, crawling to and fro as though they couldn’t recall what they were doing up their either. The massive hundred year old silver maples had long ago plummeted from their status among the clouds to be hacked and bit apart, to be stacked in neat rows for firewood. Our precious, ever-full garden became choked with weeds and thick crab grass, never to feel the curling vines of pumpkins and watermelons again.
As I scrubbed and brushed the apartment walls into a clean shade of white my dad mentioned the old house and spoke of the same habit I felt every time I passed it. He told me that it had recently been purchased by the farmer whose fields of corn had always wrapped around the acre of land. I asked him what would become of the house, even though my heart knew the answer. He looked at me with sad eyes, “It’s coming down”. My stomach dropped but I didn’t say anything. What could I say? We both felt the inevitable loss of a place that was more than just a house and some land; it was a home, a way of life.
As I drove back to town that day I found myself allowing the habit to take hold of my hands and feet, and suddenly I was parked in the driveway staring at a now empty home. It looked almost exactly the same with the dark green trim and piles of rock lining most of the way around the house that my dad always said he was going to use for landscaping; my mom and I always knew different. I could almost hear the sound of my mom cooking in the kitchen or smell the tabasco sauce we had to put on all the wood banisters to keep our dog from gnawing them to shreds. I could see my sisters and myself dodging around in the backyard as we hurled rotten tomatoes at one another and the violent snowball fights with my brother and sisters which always ended with someone crying.
Here I sat, as a twenty-one year old who had been many beautiful places and seen many amazing things, but realized that, suddenly, those moments didn’t even compare to the beauty of my childhood. It had taken me eleven years too late to feel the sorrow I had never allowed to take hold as a child. My heart broke like a worn seam and with one last strain the stitches came undone.
I pulled out of the driveway for the very last time, wiping the lone, confused tear from my cheek. As I descended from that hilltop I adjusted my rearview mirror to watch my childhood time capsule grow smaller and smaller before disappearing from view.
The next week I drove past again but this time the habit didn’t pull at me. This time the house was gone and in its place was just more farmland, as though nothing else had ever been there.
turn off my mind
shh.
don’t make a noise.
don’t say a word
as you climb into my heart.
if i hear you,
if i start to see opportunities of self-sabotage,
my mind will wake up.
and then
everything
will
go
wrong.
explore every inch
of my heart
but don’t ever come close
to my mind.
it will say words it doesn’t mean.
it will drive you away.
it will make you
hate me.
i don’t know what i would do if you hated me.
so please, please,
please,
don’t utter a word
as you sleep next to my soul.
Swift Resolve in Solvency
Furtively raping, razing
Brimming with philanthropy
Zzzzz snored Mephistopheles
as the seas
Prayed
Swallow me
For the taste
ever please
I demand an audience
To explain your Lilliputerery
Malignantly
Prosaic devotee
Auteur who wrote his name in meat
Recidivist lolling head, feigning sleep
Laughed and went
You can never wake me
Voces is all I hear now
Voices of the fear-fucking plow
Chopping
Face in its maw
But not clear how
So, I prayed to the Drow
For just a hair more now
More pairing
Less scowl
Watching me drop
Like a stripper
Goes
blaaaw
Never subtle
Never careful
All alone
But for now.
My cake that you’re eating
My skin that your wearing
My lies that you’re telling
My family you’re shelling
Not now
While you’re just taking a bow
Panting about where you’d been until now.
Cutting your thighs
To prove you know how
And all the golf-clapping demons
Clap on…
but for now.
by benajah 100cc joseph
@benajahjoseph
bnsthrnxpt.wordpress.com
Gluttony
He licks his berry-stained fingers, sucking sticky sugar and who knows what else from beneath the nails.
“You know that’s filthy?” Clara’s eyes search his face. He’s all angles. With how easily he devours food you’d expect curves and rolling skin.
Heath leans back in his chair. Appraising. Giving her a once over. “Perhaps,” he pauses, slipping his finger back into the sweet filling pouring out from the crust in front of him. He leans into her and feels her breath catch as he wipes the sticky mess across her mouth. Their faces almost touch, and she’s still not breathing. “Tastes good though,” he exhales as his tongue pushes its way into her mouth.
And he’s right.
It’s like eating light. It’s like drowning in oxygen. And she cannot stop. It is a hunger she could never describe. And she cannot stop. Her insides are bursting, but she cannot stop. The process of eating this pie has become her one and only need. And it never ends. And Clara must eat it all before he gets the chance to take anymore from her. She feels sick. She wants to stop. She needs to stop. She is suffocating. Food filling her so fast that her stomach cannot contain it. Red dripping from her mouth.
Heath holds her face down in the viscid expanse of sweet debris. “It’s alright, love. Keep going until you can’t. Keep going until your heart stops…”
And Clara weeps as the syrup fills her up. The sugar rushing through her veins, crashing into her heart. And her body cannot keep up. But still she wants more. And just when she thinks she will not fill until it is too late, he pulls her neck back. Her throat is exposed and her mouth is begging her to dig back in. “My turn,” he whispers and sucks every last bit of her out. And he keeps going until she can’t. He keeps going until her heart stops. Sticky morsels clinging to his throat. He keeps going because he can’t stop.
I’m Not a Chore
I'm trying to forget about you; the pain in your eyes when you saw me with another after I ended things. The glares you cast my way because you think I'm just another liar. The way you purposefully avoid anything to do with me now; not that I blame you that much. I never wanted to hurt you.
But in the end, I had to. Because I was tired of you hurting me and I wasn't as immune to words as I thought. I gave you my smiles and laughter, but you called them noisy. I gave you my time and effort, but you only took more. I gave my poetry - my soul - but you laughed and threw it in my face. Even my soul wasn't good enough for you. Yet as hard as I tried for you, you have the audacity to call me a chore, because my mother was dying and supporting me wasn't easy or fun.
But in the end, I don't need you. Because I'm not a chore; I never was and I will never be. I'm a human being who values herself and not only the things she can presently do, but the things she will do in the future. I am strong and resilient; I don't need you to agree with that sentiment to know that it's true. I have faced so much worse than your contempt and disdain. I will continue to face worse and overcome it.
Yes, I left abruptly and without warning, and while I regret the fact that you were hurt despite my intentions, I don't regret wanting a better and healthier situation for myself. I've said it before, and I'll say it again. I'm not a chore; much less your chore.
7/13/2119
"The Google doodle's kinda weird today, you know what it's for?"
"Uh, 100th anniversary of...somethin'."
"Wamme to click it?"
"Nah, just look up reviews for that movie, you know, the one with the thing--"
"Wonder how you get a job designing those?"
"I--what? I d'no, how's the movie look?"
"Eh, k I guess. It'd just be a cool job, don'ya think?"