I.
Sixty-eight degrees of separation
between us.
The warm balm of May has given sway
to the icy,
isolated showers
of late November.
His eye has grown weary
of the same unobstructed sight.
A chilled window pane reflects a
still cooler bed—
and two bodies
drift apart,
finding the struggle a bitter challenge
upon oceans of pima sheets and discovering
solitary warmth preferable
to a belabored embrace
(which inevitably ends with two
too annoyed by the sticky cling)
and disdainfully, painfully
shoving themselves apart where,
on a broken floe,
bilious,
we drift in two directions
across the artic white vast.
I breath a sigh…actual relief—
To shiver and smile
and find
my own warmth
in the folds of deep down,
scarcely regretting favoring
the caress of cold white cotton
to the synthetic touch of toxic familiarity.
I pray the swift return of numbing sleep
to forget for another hour,
at least,
how truly cold a bed can feel—
When broken only
by sixty-eight degrees of separation.
II.
We were not always this way,
says the cliché.
But I have begun to believe that maybe
we were this way always.
You, rigid, intolerant and arrogant—unearned and
undeserved
self-assurance and a sense of
entitlement.
Me, too young and too foolish,
not of mind—
but of spirit—
too quick to trade her sex and self-respect for a
(false)
sense of belonging and place.
your overbearing mother
and my ever-absent father
to bear false witness to the absurd and unholy union
we two have forged, perhaps,
we could bid a formal farewell,
take a bow, and drop
the curtain on this tragic comedy of the grotesque
before we become the thing we are together,
apart.
You are not bad.
I am not bad.
But, together,
we are rot, but not
the kind that you can cut away on a piece of fruit,
leaving wounded but tender, healthy flesh behind
with only a scar or a gaping wound to mark the memory
of black
and bruise.
No, we two are rot like an amalgam
of forgotten,
ugly, unwanted vegetables
left stinking
at the bottom of a refrigerator,
spoiling and melting into an indiscernible soup
of filthy,
rancid
rot.
III.
Stagnation.
We travel in familiar circles because they are
just that:
familiar.
The known has been
all too well revealed between us,
and time spent without mystery
is just that:
time spent.
Only there is no change back.
There is no receipt for refund.
There is no warranty for what is broken.
And there is certainly nothing
to show
for the time we have invested.
Together, we face the
Bankruptcy
of a lifetime
spent venturing
everything
without gain.
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