Daniel Crocker

Falling Off

Daniel Crocker, July 2009

Ashes like a Cathedral I
knock upon

I made Chili and you
weren’t hungry

Our house is a resultant tone
just for rhyme
I’ll say that I haven’t felt my bones in ages
fat grows when bodies stall

I ask you to eat
but there are the headaches again

Let’s strip this to the bare bones, shall we
I’m ill

The map hanging in the hall
is outdated
but walking my fingers across it tonight
Montana, Wyoming
someplace is warmer

I look for images
but they aren’t found
at this computer
they aren’t found in poems

It’s important that you eat
before you disappear

Sometimes I think
I’ve taken a curtain
in my sleep
and held it over you
made up a few words
and poof

This time the magic is real

you raked the yard
and the leaves are still falling

The tree strips
like a dark bone
full of fist

I noticed a knot in our pine
I thought of Freud
It didn’t even make me horny

My poems for you always turn out like this
snap out like a light

Do either of us
remember what it meant
to be young and in love

In love pays the bills
and takes us to the occasional movie

The risk is gone

We shit in front of each other
and the days stall
like that

And there are nights
when the fingers of my left hand
want to keep walking
And my right hand stops them
with a grasp more violent
than I’ve ever shown you

We are poor and we live

and if all the great poets
refuse to call this love
then they have never seen
you when you’re falling off

My Luck

Daniel Crocker, July 2009

There are so many
beautiful people
in the world
that it sometimes
makes your heart
cry stop

but not a one of them
is at the Wal-Mart
in Deslodge, Missouri
at three
in the morning.

Daniel Crocker is the author of two collections of poetry (People Everyday and Other Poems and Long Live the 2 of Spades) as well as a collection of short stories (Do Not Look Directly Into Me) and a novel (The Cornstalk Man) and several very out of print chapbooks. He is currently a student in the Center for Writers at the University of Southern Mississippi. In the mornings he practices his karate moves on unsuspecting pigeons. He’s also the editor of Trailer Park Quarterly.

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