Change rolls over me
I lose myself to the flow
a leaf in water
24 Poems ~ 24 Hours
Jessica Swafford is a writer and poet from Georgetown, Kentucky. She has participated the last five years in Lexington Poetry Month. She is currently part of the Gauntlet, a year long, generative writing workshop.
Change rolls over me
I lose myself to the flow
a leaf in water
Just testing this thing out.
I hated your tattoo.
It took me years
to make peace with it.
When I finally did,
you left me and
had it covered up.
I suddenly remembered the stars-
not the ones in the night sky
but the ones you had tattooed
on your arms while still in high school.
You regretted them as soon
as the needle stopped.
Your buzz was wearing off,
and they were the last tattoos
you ever had done.
You felt like a poser
trying to become
something you’d never be:
a shining light.
I can’t talk about
what hurts me most.
If I do I wallow
in sadness and questions.
Otherwise, I can pretend
I’ve never had any troubles.
Seven years ago
I mentioned
your name freely-
nothing to hide
or be ashamed of,
no remorse or weariness.
It’s been a long time,
but I still hold steadfast
to the ideal of what
we could have been.
One Christmas
I gave you a Zippo lighter
with the ace of spades
engraved upon its metal case.
It was custom ordered,
a connection to your dead daddy.
After unwrapping your gift,
your hands and voice were shaky.
That was the closest
I ever came
to seeing you cry.
I’ve only asked for
a few hours
of complete peace.
I want to sit
in one spot
uninterrupted.
This is one day
I’m taking for myself
after spending years
fulfilling the needs of others.
You won’t even
give me that.
Sometimes
I can’t believe
we ever found
common ground.
You want to be
hard and cold.
I want to be
more compassionate.
I can’t decide
if you consider
your good qualities
as strengths or weaknesses.
I love those things
you hate about yourself
(even how you try
to deny them).
I gathered daisies and pinecones from my walk back from the mailbox. The cows stared at the ground looking up only as I asked them about ‘earrings’. Wild strawberries peaked through grass reminding me of past practical jokes. It’s August and only 67 degrees. I’ll take it.