Smoking
On quiet, cloudy days I breathe clean, still air and
I remember smoking cigarettes.
The last pack cost me $4.28.
They were Parliament Lights,
barely cigarettes, but boldly so by default definition.
I tapped the top against my palm
to pack the tobbacco tight.
I picked at the edge, peeled the perforated plastic,
and a tiny smile of satisfaction greeted the
victory of a perfect cellophane strip pinched between my thin fingers.
An unspoken game I’d play.
Never kept score.
Maybe I should have?
I’d eye the white filters and select
the lucky one (always random)
flip it upside down and save it for last.
Then choose another, inhale the tobbacco’s sweet scent,
And with careful concern and sudden urgency,
place it gently between my lips:
Never seductive like in the movies,
or as an ex-lover once described me
(His intensity and desire still resonate).
I reached in my front pocket for my zippo
–finger-lifted from a secondhand shop–
The distinct “click” opened to a bright orange flame
And I cupped my hands around it,
to keep it safe,
to cradle the fire as if my survival depended on it
(and it did)
The paper ignited and held the heat,
A tiny act of self-immolation to keep
this sacred ritual alive
as I selfishly killed my lungs with a slow burn,
and I enjoyed it,
The way I imagine that ex-lover would.
5 thoughts on "Smoking"
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Very seductive….both the cigarettes and the poem.
I love this! I last smoked years ago but some days…I was living this moment as I read.
The last stanza is amazing!
Great ending
Thank you! I haven’t had a cigarette in nearly 15 years. Every once in a while, that craving just hits.
Thank you for reading. ♥️