Topeka
In a gray Airbnb in Topeka that smells of old cigarettes and fried food,
I’m trying not to cry in the early morning. I put on a Spotify mellow mix playlist,
start to stretch on the gray floor. I hear the gray rain coming down and click through
a list of mindfulness steps to pull my awareness away from the giant, screaming
pain in my chest. I try to think about our route westward, the Brown v Board of Education
National Parks museum that we’ll go to once everyone wakes up and packs,
what kind of poem I might find there as a white woman. And I look up to see
the beige sign on the gray wall, a big fake wood cutout circle that says Yay! You’re here.
And I am. I am in this floor in Topeka. My love and the children are sleeping, ready
to float along on the itinerary I have chiseled out for us. Yay! You’re here.
I am. All the doors in my head bursting open and slamming shut, rapidfire.
My heart like a pot of thick oatmeal when the hidden depths get so hot
it creates a pocket of boiled-off vapor, and when it’s finally strong enough,
it bubbles up and splatters thick oats everyway, scalding anyone
who happens to be near. Yay! You’re here. I am, and though I am not good,
I am better. And that is worth a cheap celebration in gray Kansas.
4 thoughts on "Topeka"
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This made me feel hopeful, Melissa. I needed it.
Topeka is its own version of poetry. Very good poem.
Love: ” smells of old cigarettes and fried food”, the weave of gray throughout, and the hope in “Yay! You’re here. I am, and though I am not good,/I am better. And that is worth a cheap celebration in gray Kansas.”
It’s always a joy to read your poems! Happy LexPoMo!