Sitting in the Car With the Windows Up
It’s actually winter this time
sixty-five degrees in February
outside the supermarket,
Cadillac’s engine halted
many moments ago now.
Inside the car it might feel
eighty-five degrees —
I allow the heat to grip
my throat with mounting
pressure, wriggle a little
in the stuffy discomfort—
try to picture the dream
painting your mind’s horizon
ever westward as
July’s midnight heat
gripped your sleeping throat
tighter and tighter
like it was nothing at all.
A Typical Conversation
these days is more like
a meditation or a prayer,
though I keep it casual and begin
sacredly with The Simpsons,
in nomine patris et filii
et spiritus sancti
purple-monkey-dishwasher—
and for a moment you must away,
not to the past but our new future
where you heft the delicate heavenly dart
in your steady hand, aiming
over your shoulder
through a distance that isn’t so far
to bullseye your smile
whenever I need it most.
Writing Poetry with God
I end up doing most of the talking.
Questions as worthless as the genesis of kings,
the floorboards creaking their disapproval.
The time spent in between writing words
is cousin to the vastness between molecules—
savior to the wreckage of time.
Each gifted silence is brief,
simple like my father explaining
that we’re going on vacation.
Brandon C Spalletta is a poet from Herndon, Virginia. His poetry has been published in Panoplyzine, Gargoyle Online, Elysium Review, Maryland Literary Review, WWPH Writes, and The Mid-Atlantic Review, and his poem ‘Daydreaming’ received an Honorable Mention for Day Eight’s 2023 Luce Prize. At twelve years old he stood atop Old Rag Mountain, and his heart never left.
Discover more from DODGING THE RAIN
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Sitting in the Car. I had to read it twice. Wow.
LikeLike