monday morning meeting my landlady on the street
it’s a week day
and i’ve skipped work
when we see each other like this
my head
is vodka/wine cloudy
i have not yet recovered from
last week’s six-day work week
we are tight smiles
and inane pleasantries
to her i’m a monthly check
copious booze bottles on recycling evenings
and little else
her eyes get wide
and she says, not working today?
but i smile and reassure her
that it’s just a scheduled day off
that seems to placate her
but i don’t know how
i’m going to sooth her soul tomorrow
when i’m fucking off from the place again
drowning myself
in a titanic of wine
and internet porn
pretending
that i own this whole
goddamned world
no matter whom
i write the rent check to.
mother of the year
one kid
standing on tables
one kid
playing in traffic
the third one
picking his ass
and sniffing his fingers
her dumb face
glued to a cell phone
streaming tv shows
as the village
burns
burns
burns
around her.
the love songs of joey ramone
all these years later
and i still remember the way
her tears soaked through the phone
the sound a heart breaks
when it breaks long distance
she wanted to be a child bride
but i wanted to be jack kerouac
only i was nothing to her now
but a punk
…gabba gabba hey.
bodyshaping
sculpted women in bikinis
on cable sports tv
when i was thirteen
six in the morning
fresh from my paper route
amazonian goddesses
doing legs lifts or lifting weights
stretching and pulling
sweating and touching each other
as they cheered one other on
while i watched them
with my hand down my pants
strangling that little monster
hoping to get to that great
and grand explosion
before the next
commercial break.
big wigs
the genius of their job
is to create a lifetime
of pointless work for us
but to make us think
that the whole idea
was ours in the first place.
Sharp slices of Americana. Why I don’t miss, for one second, working in the “hospitality” industry. I know those people.