Glass Head
Cooler nights.
A glass head.
Fall me asleep.
I can see the leaves
dropping
in a month or two.
And then the world
will just be brown.
I never thought
I’d feel this way.
I found it
on the cusp of Fall
about to go dormant.
I’ll lie in the leaves
for as long as you’ll let me.
Little bits
will get caught
in my hair.
I will smell of
a gentle decay.
The wet earth beneath
will dampen my clothes.
The evenings will grow dark.
I’ll get cold.
Fuzzy socks
and soup
and tea
won’t warm me.
Mere hours of sleep
won’t hide
a lack of hibernation.
Golden red
will turn to dark slush
under snow.
The world will go brown
except for my blood.
Except for
something yellow
sewn into the dirt.
A bulb I hope
will burst forth
come Spring.
It is still Summer.
Green and vibrant.
But I am ready for change.
To feel a freezing wind
against my cheeks.
To see which way
my mind sways
during life’s
next repetition.
To complain that
Summer isn’t here.
For snow to bead
into liquid
on my boots.
To trod upon stiff grass
and frozen mud.
And eventually see
that first day
warm enough
to not need a coat.
With new knowledge,
and more grey hair.