Poetry, Essays, and Stories

  • poem: my fake ID

    poem: my fake ID

    my fake ID

    Nothing was more fun

    than loving you,

    running around town,

    raising hell everywhere we could.

    I’ll always remember the night

    we tried to go bowling

    but my fake ID

    got taken away,

    or the night we went

    rock climbing and I beat you

    and you grabbed me by the waist

    and asked if we were going to do it

    and we did.

    Nothing was more fun

    than loving you,

    running around town,

    raising hell everywhere we could.

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  • Poem: A summer evening in Boston

    Poem: A summer evening in Boston

    A summer evening in Boston

    Three men with fishing poles on the Charles River. A cellphone plays radio music on the dock. Flowers stink from their trees. A dead squirrel flattened on the concrete path. Runners speed past in formation with their highlighter yellow shorts. A boat cruises past as we dodge duck droppings in the grass. You lay your blanket out first while I open my basket with hidden wine. Do all beautiful things bloom before they end?

    heartbreakandcigarettes.com

    A personal note about Thanksgiving and Black Friday weekend:

    We went out for Thanksgiving dinner. It was a beautiful time filled with warmth, laughter, live music, and excellent food. Today, I went out for the first time since the holiday. It was another cozy day with great food. We partook in two-dollar oysters from Legal Sea Foods and stood in line to buy seasonal candles and Wallflowers from Bath and Body Works. Now, it’s time to relax with a book, one of the candles that we secured earlier this evening, and a wilting bouquet of Trader Joe’s roses.

    If you’re curious about shopping the book or candle in the photo, follow the link below for more information:

    https://liketk.it/5CmAx

    Just FYI, I could earn a commission from the link above.

    heartbreakandcigarettes.com

  • The Yellow Convertible

    The Yellow Convertible

    Tension crackles upon the surface of the quiet 

    lake like chicken grease on an electric stove. A white feather 

    floats down on sharp green grass. A small yellow convertible 

    zips past the opening of the park. The glossy birds 

    sing in their oak trees. When will this loneliness pass? 

  • Ice Skates

    Ice Skates

    Still as dead 

    moss on the surface of a stagnant 

    body of water. Black as the bottom of 

    midnight. Pregnant with 

    the fullness of the first day of summer 

    break. Cold and sharp like the blades 

    of ice skates. This is my new 

    beginning.

  • Thorny Stems

    Thorny Stems

    Pink roses wilting on sogging 

    thorny stems, resting in a faded 

    vase, half-filled with rotted 

    water. Through the window, 

    the milky sun sits encrusted in gray 

    fog. A spider weaves its cotton 

    candy web in the corner of my 

    studio. The clock glows neon 

    white on the silvery 

    face of the microwave. Has new 

    love finally found me? 

  • The Bonfire

    The Bonfire

    Wood splayed together like 

    crossbones crackling in the summer 

    night blaze. The evening sky looking like

    winter’s salt-sprinkled tar. Chatter was a torrential 

    downpour as we approached 

    the bonfire. Remnants of earlier rain 

    sprinkled lightly over all of us. News 

    on a forgotten television. Sapped mahogany blocks 

    burning up and perfuming 

    the air with its spices. The bittersweet feeling of 

    the end.

  • indigo nights

    indigo nights

    on days when the darkest indigo nights

    swallow up my sunburnt soul,

    I remember old nights violet with joy

    and fill my cup with hope.

  • Hibiscus Soda

    Hibiscus Soda

    As I draw my ring finger along

    the wood grain of the deep oak restaurant 

    dinner table, you ask me 

    what you have always asked me:

    What do you want?

    My favorite question, asked at 

    our favorite restaurant. My answer 

    never falters: hibiscus soda. This is the only 

    place where we can get it. The lighting is always

    too dim at this hour, and I can barely read 

    the menu even if I tried. The rest of my order, 

    you still have memorized, from when 

    we were still together. I swallow down 

    the memories as each one rises, stretching 

    toward the sconces high on the wall. Each one leaving a sour taste 

    like the fruit that swirls alongside 

    the herbal flavors of my drink on my tongue. Every time I 

    think to ask you something new, you replace the question 

    with our old script. Old feelings bouncing back and forth between us like 

    the marbles we used to play in schoolyard games. 

    Dirty and silent as the blue wallpaper lining 

    the hallways of this old restaurant. 

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    heartbreakandcigarettes.com

  • Cracked Teeth

    Cracked Teeth

    As he twirls a fork around in the storebought 

    ramen noodles on the stovetop, painstakingly emptying 

    every ossified crumb from the synthetic bag 

    into the boiling night of the saucepan. 

    Even with the hardest clumps, we cannot 

    afford the waste of anything, seasoned or unsalted. 

    We think of our children nearly decades 

    out of the house and almost weep – now 

    is the time. We decide poverty is a cousin of risk. Like college 

    students sprinting through stipends, we savor every 

    morsel of time. Seconds expand with great focus on 

    every wish wrestled into fruition. Now, we celebrate. 

    I unseal, crack through, and unroll the cans 

    of tinned fish. I then break out the crusted bottle, delicately 

    palming it like wheat-stained window glass. 

    It would have been house wine at our old

    favorite restaurant, at best, before the hard times. He tosses 

    a few ice cubes into each stemless cup. Our cracked

    teeth are worth yards of silk as we count out 

    our undusted dreams. There is nothing more satisfying than 

    shining shooting starlight upon the unbroken, 

    blackened lines of tarnished hope.

  • Boiled Tar

    Boiled Tar

    When I lean against the velvet coolness of the glass door 

    at the first entrance of the new apartment, 

    sunshine boils like golden tar 

    against the reflective blue parasol handle on the blacktop. 

    Dishwater silently evaporates. It hisses under the weight 

    of the atmosphere. Evergreens sag in northeastern winds 

    and lurch onto the parched West. Ice caps soften as blood bleeds 

    into the Atlantic Ocean. So much vast 

    and limited space. Dust and remains kick up 

    onto blinded windshields from the tires 

    of mindless drivers. Concrete, crackling. 

    Neat gunpowder clouds – shimmering charcoal glistening 

    in September’s spark and flames. Is there anything more violent 

    than the vinegar and lemon, jagged edged 

    magic apex of summer’s end?