i.

does
bacon

still
sizzle?

it is 2016,
the year

2000
happening

again, a now-
recurring

nightmare
that growing up

has stolen
any chance

of waking
from.

ii.

somewhere
in the distance

of the dream
i have

a red &
a blue

colored
pencil,

shading in
states as they fall

either side
of the aisle.

iii.

i was told
i’d have a voice,

that i was
supposed

to wield
that voice

as promise
of antecedent amendments

but it
must be a bark

to them,
a thing worth

calling the landlord over
–noise disturbance–

something requiring
a lid.

iv.

even
a cough

comes back
at me.

the map
becomes red.

then very
red.

then too
red.

i don’t
stay up for the end.

it’s all the end
for some of us.

i cannot
look

at what
comes off in band-aids

anymore. his color
is not my color.

v.

his heart
doesn’t

pump
water from the well.

his is the dusty
cistern

my brother
will stumble

on, fall down,
twist his ankle in.

vi.

then he’ll tell
my brother,

“walk across
the desert,

one foot
ought to be enough.”

of course
they don’t

build a wall.
it was always a mirage

in evaporating
oasis.

it doesn’t mean
we don’t falter,

little more than
pole jumpers

leaping from
sand.


Michael Prihoda lives in central Indiana. He is the founding editor of After the Pause, an experimental literary magazine and small press.

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