The house in my dreams looks like
a single-story in Jonesboro
where I can still map the floor plan,
see in perfect color, shrink under high ceilings.
I would hate it when we’d leave.
There is no stain of sadness there, or
if there is, it is just one scent in the
jumbled potpourri my not-ripe brain
was too green to call sharp.
When I sleep at night, my lungs will breathe like
it is not burdensome, with the sheer pleasure
of keeping me warm. I am no longer
hollow, now made up of contentment and
my mother’s cooking. She does something wonderful
with Ragu and garlic that I will adopt
as my own. She still loves me,
and touches my shoulder when she says so,
so I hate it when I leave.
I think my love will take shape like
the looming of some heavy blanket,
it would be gradual, painstaking, and
so very soft. I will grow
to care for someone who does & does not
make me crazy, who will & will not
let me alone. I will hate it when they leave.