—I’M LUCKY TO BE
HERE. I KNOW THAT EVERY STEP OF THE WAY
When I Lived in
Chelsea Above the Eating Disorders Clinic
Each
one is a mantis. Slight as a stiff line
of rain, somber like a monk that’s not trying to take your money.
I
watch them from the window, how they cross the street with bowed heads,
reverent or ashamed even when it’s pouring or when gusts twirl trash around
their ankles like starved rats.
I
gnaw on the sock-dry end of a vendor pretzel I bought a week ago and just now found
in my handbag. The things you find in a purse
can tell so many stories, though stories may or may not be true.
The strawberry-blonde is my favorite,
though I don’t know why. Her breast
plate gleams like whole milk. It looks
like a pair of wings welded together, made of bone and regret.
When
she buzzes in, I race down the stairs. Press
my ear against the therapist’s door. All
I ever hear is (…)
My
mother was a faulty tonic, was a fog horn blaring, was a ceiling fan always
shredding the rusty air in our trailer.
In the food store with her once, she said about a woman with another
cart, “Look at that fat pig. For fuck’s
shame.”
I
spit pretzel slivers into the toilet, saliva and spurs clinging to the curved
walls of the bowl. When I pull myself up
using the toilet rim, I avoid the mirror because I know she’ll be there, with
me hooked backward in the grocery cart.
I
go to sleep on a mattress that’s as soft as bread just out of the oven. I take breaths so deep that my nostrils
separate the yeast odors from the slick butter scent that’s bound to come. It’s a bit like being at the door of Heaven,
wondering if you’ll get in and who gets to decide.
We’re you the store manager at Nordstrom at Pentagon City?
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