From a Sobeys Parking Lot at the End of the World
A poem

Another morning-night-morning shift…
the familiar toss up of sunrises:
something between poppy-coloured clouds and
Bellini-soaked skies...
a strawberry sun bleeding out over our heads in the asphalt desert
of an Adelaide Street in the ghost town we were run out of that one solar eclipse spring.
At the back of the Sobeys parking lot
where we pissed against the steel-slat building at 3am
and hoped the security cameras wouldn’t see...
Where we held hands over the E-brake
and pretended doing acid on rollercoasters was normal.
We would spend morning-night-mornings
laughing in the face of time.
You gifted me promises of the apocalypse
scratched along the inner pulp of my cheek,
written with the sharp knife of your tongue.
Momento mori, little bunny...
Remember that you have to die.
Except the apocalypse never came
even when you tried to teach it how to knock on our door, even
when you tried to become it yourself.
We peeled out of the parking lot,
a peach strung up against the struggling blue turned in the rearview mirror,
the kind of blue that hides in the scrappy indigo of wee hours and sleepless nights;
like bruise-tired eyelids or
moonstone under mid-day sun.
About the Creator
sleepy drafts
a sleepy writer named em :)



Comments (2)
Oh, I really like this, Em <3 <3
Sing-song rhythm in a minor key and coloured with the hues of morning-night-morning. All shades, all hues, all blues. Loved the poem and great photo too