Letting go of things
A pile of rotting peaches sit in the fridge, playing sticks with a chocolate Easter bunny with its ears bitten off (it’s June). Unsalvagably brown bananas sit in the freezer, tallying the days on the wall that it’s been since I put them there with the intent of making banana bread to mask their bruises. Condiments crammed in the door like sardines in a can get sentimental and reassure each other that they’ll never go bad- at least in each other’s hearts. Maybe not in each other’s noses.
My memory of you sits moldering in my camera roll and a thousand playlists, stuck in time and replaying like a TV show I watch again and again for the comfort of it. I don’t find much comfort in it. My mind and my body live in the filth of it like white noise in the background. Nostalgia kills, a slow death.
5 thoughts on "Letting go of things"
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Great details and imagery here! I can really relate to this stagnant, rotten kind of feeling & its manifestations in the physical world.
Can definitely relate to the camera roll and playlist thing
I love all of it but especially the last stanza, I can relate.
Interesting to read about what is let go and what is hiding in places and should be let go. If you are to revise, try reading this without the last sentence of stanza 1 and without the last 2 sentences of stanza 2. This way, you transition into stanza two while also hanging on the contradiction that I mention in the very first line of this post. Very pleasurable read. Keep it up.
Storms, 3 confirmed tornadoes , like potatoes, tomatoes, and no electricity , help me relate to this poem, except no you to rage at…