Telling Time By Tiling
some things are timeless, and some are dissolved memories
Telling Time by Tiling The square tiles in the kitchen remind me of playing hopscotch, of jagged chalk outlines, of slipping, of my parents' generation and their Risky Business renditions, and how some things are timeless, and some are dissolved memories I think of an old collection of socks from hospital stays, the kind that stick to slick, shiny floors, fuzzy saviors that will never let you fall When I was young I wondered if they served Kid Cuisine meals in prison while I looked for designs in the linoleum of another kitchen on Duchess Street, my feet in thin, white, grey tinged lace cuffed school uniform socks, the bad kind for sliding, but I did it till the microwave ding sounded, wondering how moonwalking can possibly be real or achievable except on TV While eating cold cuts with my sister, I would tell her to bite little holes in the bologna to pretend we lived on the street and found these bits of food in an alley A therapist would later ask me if these were merely childish fantasies or the early warning signs of having deep empathy I dunno, maybe The tiles in her lobby, like her face, are warped and ugly I prayed for my incarcertated uncle after giving thanks for my meal of dinosaur shaped mystery meat they called chicken I remembered a story, one told while drunk, of that uncle busting his butt while cutting a rug to a Johnny Cash song in this same kitchen He used to cheat at hopscotch, at everything really, then he got caught The food is too hot, pasty mashed potatoes and a corn watered down brownie Yesterday's leftovers congeal in the corner and there's now a hole in my sock to match the one in my heart There's a missed call from county on the caller ID, and there's little me with all my too big thoughts rising around the tray as steam
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I would also like to share that my poem “Lumerian” has been published over at The Beatnik Cowboy. You can check that out HERE.



This is such a beautiful poem. You capture childhood so well, at the same time reacting to the realities of adult life around you. A gem of a poem Jennifer!
Beautifully written!