Poetry

Yesterday

“Yesterday”

 

Yesterday, my dog died

I tried to give him a proper burial, trembling in the dead of the night 

with a shovel in hand

Today, I see the dogs out at midnight in the greenery

Bounding about with their canines pearl

(a flash of white in the distance–i wish it could linger)

Yesterday, I died

Today, I am born revitalized

Each rumble of laughter tumbling from the pets’ chests

Another flash of joy

Pressing ever-closer,

Hot breath fogging the windowpane

I see:

Rain droplets fall on their speckled fur

Paws

Claws

Eyes gleaming with whispered hushes of something anew

I see my darkened reflection in the window with my forehead pressed to the glass, perspiring

Wonder if the Golden Retriever ever fell in love with the neighboring poodle

Whether the Dachshund

Had a dream of one day conquering the species

Whether the Pitbull felt lonely

Without the p

r

  e

     s

            s

of his owner’s chafing leash

Against his neck

Or whether a pet 

Truly calls that place

Its home

I can’t pinpoint when exactly in our history we decided to be our greatest enemy

When pain and sacrifice became synonymous with hard work

(The Yorkshire terrier wishes it could be as fast as the German shepherd)

Maybe in captive solitude

We succumb to our inner weaknesses

Let ourselves be the lesser one to submit to our flamboyant masters

And pray for eternal unity

But instead of hands intertwined together as a gesture of peace

It is tooth and claw

Bark and bite

Leaves ripped straight from their roots in jagged brutality,

rife with patterns of smeared thumbprints

where the traces of a gardener’s love remain broken

And when the collar is unclasped from our necks…

What then?

We still flee back to where we came from

Back to all we know:

Wet moss beneath our feet

As we run to the predator and become the prey 

Spinning in the air with our blissful ignorance

Clouds foreboding

Hands warm

In some abhorrent form

Of

A

happily

ever

after–

Yesterday, I slept on the floor 

Today, I inhale the scent of chewy toys and kibble

from the forgotten crate by my bed

and even later still i will question whether 

there really ever was a true place those dogs

could call home

whether the fabric of their bed was comprised of all mismatched stitches 

from the old man running the tailor shop

but i suppose

the one benefit of being a pet dog

is that you’d never know if you could’ve been something greater,

anyway.

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