The bus revves itself to life  
I glance up to gather in 
to a single 
sentiment. 
A summary of a self folded
in B1: hello, female, elbow 
farang. In A1, sunspots speed-talk 
decades of seven-day labor and a bandaged hand 
crusty-edged, fraying, graying, clasped over 
an unread newspaper speaks of now. C1 and D1, 
a teenager drapes his arm around his kid sister 
and glares out the window. We love one another
but we want to get away.   
Child, affection, teenager.
Cue, habit, reward. And what 
when the reward is pain? 
I choose it often. 
A bird on the fence 
prickles neckless routines to compose 
sleek for flight. 
Life in the world, a triangle: 
the bird, the rising sun, the neighbor, 
a toddler, bundled, inventing something 
as a push toy. Stumbling across friction 
early. 6:49 a.m. and I've already lived 
in two cities with two men I did not love 
to bid on the disappointment of stabbed silences. Something about 
thoughts as ripples across a pond. I wake up to start
the difference between my grandmother and myself 
a matter of voice, not the tendancy towards 
relentless narration. My family has a statement 
on everything. I have no desire to fight
so I have thoughts. Last night, I slept to your name 
and awoke to it beside me. This is not a metaphor. Like I said, 
my reward is often
pain and satellites orbit your inquiries
a dialogue of circles 
overlapping, bypassing, arching with pleasure or waves 
of burped shudders. 
This morning, I mouth my message to the bird, taking off: 
Happy New Year.         
 
 
what a beautiful start to poem a day!
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