Moon Jellyfish
Walking the low-tide beach at dusk, I stopped short at a dead jellyfish:
pink poison (a tattoo on the nape of a neck) still stinging, hurtful.
Further on, another: Uncle Fester’s bald scalp—dumb, electrified.
Hundreds left strewn all over the mud: clear sandy blobs, half-globe sadnesses.
One jellyfish lay like a broken Magic 8 ball: too hazy to tell.
One had black sand dried into a small V, like the back of a pixie cut
or a soul patch, shaved & groomed, a mound shorn to please: sexy & so plump.
One fit into a bra, balanced breasts. One missed the wave, couldn’t get home.
A heavy-set woman paddled her board toward the little harbor, north.
Did you see all of these? I yelled; my words echoed off her sunburnt skin.
One, a dried purple plum. One had the imprint of a toddler’s soft arch.
The harbor illuminated with globe lights strung off the yacht clubs’ piers.
I realized this was my old drunk nightmare but I wasn’t sure who else knew.
The boozy boats moored, bobbing? The woman, rowing, hair pulled up
& clasped?
Source: Poetry (October 2020)