Tomorrow's the day.
I've been anxiously awaiting and dreading the day
For weeks now.
Tomorrow we are no longer what we've become,
Rather, we'll revert to what we once were.
After all the leaps and bounds we've made,
We'll be home in our boring suburban towns,
Spending time with our boring suburban friends,
And I'll miss you.
A moment of silence is probably deserved.
A moment to silently wave goodbye
To whatever it was growing between us
Like marigolds growing in New York window boxes,
A lucid profession of beauty
Swimming in all this sludge and slime and pollution.
They grow it thick enough to swallow a person without chewing, you know.
So while I stand day after day and night after night by the window,
Curmudgeonly cultivating,
You wander the cracked streets and broken sidewalks of this cold, polluted city,
Planting chemical imitations of tulips and hydrangeas - little pieces of yourself, really -
In piles of sand and decomposing garbage,
Only to burn the seeds and sprouts in a futile attempt to replenish heat lost
As a result of that guy
And all the things he took with him, the way he left a void somewhere deep inside you.
So search,
Crawl on your hands and knees if you have to,
Scour the earth like a haystack,
And if you ever find your needle let me know.
In the mean time, I'll wait
And watch as our marigolds grow, whither, and decompose,
Feeding life like wisdom to the soil
So that someday a garden may grow so grand
That it clears the pollution from our minds
And picks the garbage from our hearts.
-a.l. knox