Dead End Street
Down at the end of the road
where the grass sometimes grew in patches
like our flea-ridden cats fur
Was the big, fenced burial site.
We were young, though
and wouldn’t be scared off.
Nothing could stop us back then.
We’d laugh in its face when we passed.
And in it we’d conquer the scraggly trees
climbing high, clinging, and looking down
at the entirety of the place.
But we were afraid, we just pretended not to be
Because we weren’t sure why we were.
*
Rocky Mountain Road Trip
It’s been years since I’ve seen the skyline of the Rockies
Since I’ve spectacled the cascading springs and streams
seen scenery I could never erase.
The sands of the desert and the searing sun on my skin,
The whittling winds whipping walls of sand my way and
wailing, running to the van, hoping I won’t be wiped out.
My mom in a pit of rattlesnakes
staying calm to keep me calm
Sane and silent rather than screaming
All to resist startling the other, striking mother.
It’s been years since I’ve stretched out on the grass and stared up at a stretching
sky,
settling into silence and serenity.