Postcards From My Concrete Backyard
I.
in these lengthy summer months
He doesn’t deny us exercise.
we are given yard time
to sun smarting skin
and purpled limbs.
ride our bicycles
in His parking lot
but don’t fall—
we know His concrete
readily claws
at His trapped kin.
II.
her birthday came and I bought her
a book of clichéd poetry
milk and honey— nothing of substance.
He flipped through it
didn’t approve of it
told us to reconvene on the concrete.
stand around the tin can,
strike a match and track
the flames that lick letters
off the pages.
III.
too old for supervised yard time,
I go outside if I so choose.
stand in the garden,
rest my back on the wire fence,
face fractures in aging asphalt
that also appear on the three concrete walls.
spot His army of pigeons that line the ledges
standing at attention
like feathered gargoyles
that rain drops of shit
supervising my self-assigned yard time.