The Cauliflower Nest

for Mom

It's confusing, after eating so much cauliflower
From the serving tray, to find oneself alone
Like this, a cutout on the cutting board long after
The blade has dropped. Whatever is useful
In the cruciferous digestive experience will lodge
Somewhere in the psyche's cluttered nest
So later on, as some foul event runs a flutter,
It might seep into the fissured foundation like
Emergency glue.

                                A furry arrow wags toward my
Head but I know it's not a threat. I find
It hard to stay quiet. I say quiet things
Nodding my head though I have nothing to
Say, and in this I am like my mother. My teeth
Are not her teeth, my ears are not her ears.
Her dog's flicking tail has no place in my poem,
Yet it appears,

arrow-like, its motion stronger
Than any virtue, more virulent than imagery
Or rhythm. It lights up a certain part of the brain,
The way the mere thought of money will ignite
A warm glow around the hypothalamus
But then as it diminishes you wonder whether
You really desired to become better, stronger,
And more circumspect in social and financial
Matters.
                   At least my body is a nest, a place
That hums and shivers and burns, a bungalow
To crush with other bodies, other bungalows,
Before becoming the cross-eyed ghoul digging up
Dead pets in the neighbor's backyard graveyard.
A parade of wounds would at least amuse the guests.
 

Copyright Credit: Nathan Hoks, "The Cauliflower Nest" from Nests In Air.  Copyright © 2021 by Nathan Hoks.  Reprinted by permission of Black Ocean.
Source: Nests in Air (Black Ocean, 2021)