what the grass couldn't do for me
the man on the motor
outside my window-
black as day
curtain-covered-
is my father
I wonder politely what
the grass did to
him:
nothing he could have
done
to me
nothing he could have done
nothing different
nothing like that night
when I was five
and didn't want to be
tickled
in a dark room
like the one I
inhabit now as I copy down my
own words
I threatened
to shoot my own
father
not the one up
there
no I don't trust
his pointing finger
this father more
realistic
harsh and unfeeling-
ever wonder where I got the
idea
from?-
he left
and came back with his
rifle
loaded it
pointed it at me
thrill of a second
shot spit and anger
I hid under my bed-side
table
with the little drawer
where I kept all the secrets
I wished I had
to keep my plastic
ponies
company
I was used to hysteria
by the time I could talk
and realized
sometimes people wouldn't
talk back
so I talked back for them
but in this moment
the hysteria
didn't speak
I cried like a selfish
bitch
reassured of what I was
then my father handed me
the gun
"I am your father
and you are going to
shoot me-
fucking shoot
right at my heart."
and he took his pointer finger
and circled the target
coordinate
a good poet
would recollect the
feel of the gun on my knees
and the weight
and the measurements
perhaps the caliber
but I was five
and this was real
unlike most of
my new-found realities
one last point
towards the cause
and the ending-
drilling back through the
salty shit
moister on my chin
in my cheeks
flooding irises
all I knew
was the afternoon we spent lying
on his bedroom
floor
me on his chest
pretending not to be pressed
there
for his heartbeat
"no, it's ok
you can listen.
put your head back."
crouched under the
table now
head hanging down
eyes tight
"put your head back
goddammit."
thankfully he
got tired of standing,
took the gun
and took his leave