section eight
i come from the broken
playground littered with dented coke-can
crack pipes, bullet shells, and bottle shards
that scarred my arches;
from my mother’s squeaky, yellow
rubber gloves, and the burnt-grease smell
of my dad’s mushy fried chicken.
i belong to my father’s heavy leather belt,
my girlfriend’s well-oiled windows
and foot-long bricks of blank-
label cheese that sweated orange.
i come from crowding
with other families around
a boxy, aluminum community
mailbox the first of every month, my mom’s sweet,
cucumber-scented face cream that left lips oily,
and, “i’m so proud of you, son,”
though i am nothing to be proud of.
Source: Poetry (February 2021)