Monday, April 16, 2012

my girlfriend's alright

                             My girlfriend is alright in telling me things,
                                            I didn't know about myself,
                                                      in a dimly-lit motel bathroom
                                                    as rusted water leaks from an old metal facet
                                                       onto warped linoleum tiles.
                         We sit next to each other commiserating through pale dry morning hours as
                            pawnshop cars screech from midnight parking-lots,
                                  we stare into each others faces ascending
                                              into cool embraces upon
                                soiled mattress covers talking,
                                              evolving,
                    transcending crooked anecdotes our predecessors had to face while an
                            out-of-tune mini-fridge hums along with a hidden radiator parallel
                                        with on-going conversation we are not audio recluses,
                            romanticizing beside sunrise windows,
                                  below flickering ceiling fixtures spreading
                                   dingy shadows along crimson carpeting and
                                    sordid manuscripts piled loosely atop sticky coffee-tables,
                                     a sickle moon's luminescence encompasses an
                                           outdoor establishment's perimeter
                    
                             Her plastic purse jingles (when shaken) loose change and car keys.
                             My girlfriend is alright, we don't care about the weather or what time it is.
                             We cannot stand television with its endless charade
                                     of futile fiction,  its embarrassing attempts at
                                           creating non-fictional pastimes
                                             
                                Another weekday evening transpires through silhouetted motel curtains into
                                   the placid dusk of routine disposition
                            An abandoned warehouse blearily clings to a junkyard horizon in
                                    sallow evening foreshadowing,
                                   where a juvenile sun presses its grim tongue into crude awakening
                                          sultry minutes of predawn fornication,
                                              as night crawlers crept and wept in
                                                   desolate alleyways of old rustic deity.
                                                    Hungover faces cringe incessantly,
                                                            enduring a moments panic,
                                                               through abrupt realizations of
                                                                    how lost and empty reality actually is
                                                                                 when you're sober
                       
       
                            My girlfriend is alright, she doesn't have to know everything.
                         

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