I Write Poetry
This one blew up.
Teddy Bear
Three years old, I saw you,
brown strands of dandruff
laced with stone eyes and
threaded lips. My hands
squeezed your body against
my chest, and I wondered
why you wouldn’t hug back.
A powdered stain of sobs resided
in your chest. I surrounded you in a
house of blankets and counted bruises
and soothed my crying legs
and wondered why you wouldn’t hug back.
I pulled needles from my brain
and sewed his face to yours.
The knife slammed through your gut
and tore bits of cotton from its new hole;
I clasped my teeth around your eye
and yanked it out and apologized
and asked if you could hug back.
I looked at the eyepatch, at your
syrup colored body with scars of cotton,
resting by the driveway on
garbage day. I watched you
suffocate in plastic as the truck
yanked its load down the street. I felt
her lips press against my hair
as she asked me why
I wouldn’t hug back.
Teddy Bear
Three years old, I saw you,
brown strands of dandruff
laced with stone eyes and
threaded lips. My hands
squeezed your body against
my chest, and I wondered
why you wouldn’t hug back.
A powdered stain of sobs resided
in your chest. I surrounded you in a
house of blankets and counted bruises
and soothed my crying legs
and wondered why you wouldn’t hug back.
I pulled needles from my brain
and sewed his face to yours.
The knife slammed through your gut
and tore bits of cotton from its new hole;
I clasped my teeth around your eye
and yanked it out and apologized
and asked if you could hug back.
I looked at the eyepatch, at your
syrup colored body with scars of cotton,
resting by the driveway on
garbage day. I watched you
suffocate in plastic as the truck
yanked its load down the street. I felt
her lips press against my hair
as she asked me why
I wouldn’t hug back.