“Elysium” — Thoughts I Have Commuting To Work

The man smokes beside me, inside of a smoking prohibited shelter.

The smell wafts further in because he is by the open frame.

The smoke bites my throat, a threat with every breath.

Time passes with equal opportunity for survival or for death.

I don’t like it  because it has a smell.

I don’t like it because of the cancer.

Children run just outside screaming and laughing that sirens go by without stopping.

The street in the summer has people on it burning from the sun.

But people hold dollar ice creams, sucking on them like ice cubes of sugar.

Boys wearing the gang colors of a faded Miami, in tank tops that hang on their biceps

Fill the street as dusk drops on the street and the rooftops.

I remember chewing gum and sunglasses, both I use to keep me thin.

The beautiful are models, filled with certainty about the world where they occupy life as if it were space.

In summer it is too hot, so that the rain that falls is warm.

In winter I can’t feel anything but bound up.

There is no place I can be except in between, a place that I just fall into.

Elysium is absolutely perfect because it started existence as a hope and is created out of a wish.

It is a bet whether we choose to go there, or forever miss our chance when we rely on others to take us there.

It is a secret everyone knows but can’t prove is true.

The man smokes beside me, inside of a smoking prohibited shelter.

He bangs his cane loudly on the metal legs of the chair.

And I get up and push past him to escape the crowded smallness of a room with glass walls.

Perfection is always believed to exist despite the marred definition of the Greeks and the Romans.

I brush, lightly, slightly, the frame, only feeling its hardness and its immovable force, regretting my bruise.

I do not inhabit a lake of canoes and mountains.

There is nothing there.

The trees don’t talk, the water is senseless, and I have no where to drop cigarettes and ashes.

The beauty of the beach is beautiful at night, the waves rushing loud.

It is cold enough on the sand to bury the dead there, their bones becoming shells.

The Sun, the Galaxy, and the Universe

The day is suddenly hot, and heated, underneath a sun making droplets of water float.

An umbrella stands, open, greeting the sun and holding it dearly, close.

I swear damp cigarettes smell like wet grass, attractive amid simmering tar in a square kettle.

Time is still, almost quiet, because it plugs my ears, making me oblivious to anything not natural.

If I want to remember today, because I moved up in class, I will remember the cost of the ticket, like a tattoo of ink on my skin.

There were many pretty girls just graduated from school, and boys who lent them their sweatshirts.

They gave up on their curves to stay warm, toes bare, ice smoothies sweet and cold, sucked through straws.

As luck is always one chance in a million, envy glares, sure that the result and the reason are wrong.

I love the look and usefulness of a white pickitte fence, something even the smell and dirt of a pig farm cannot swallow.

We are oblivious to the speed of the universe; in a vacuum, there is no stop, no wait.

For something so peaceful, we are the loudest noise, rambling like a pin ball trapped as a marble.