Poem of the Day – March 10

Some people inside my head

Are making so much noise

It’s hard to think. What’s going on?

Are they having a party?

In the middle of the day?

 

I bang my forehead

With the heel of my hand

And it stops. That was easy.

Now what was I trying

To think about?

 

Getting the car serviced?

Practicing on the piano?

Ordering a toner cartridge?

Trimming my fingernails?

Making a salad for lunch?

 

It’s far too quiet in there, now.

Are they waiting for me to think

Important thoughts? For example,

How it’s possible to feel fear

And anger at the same time.

 

How satisfaction comes from

The knowledge that the numbers

Stamped on the side of the tire

Are the width, then the height,

Finally the diameter.

 

Which leads to thoughts of the

Internal combustion engine,

Invented more than a century ago,

Before the rotary telephone,

Which young people have no idea

How to use. Just ask them.

 

Before neurology, which might explain

The people inside my head,

And the fact that they’re whispering now,

Trying not to disturb me, I assume,

But I want to know what they’re saying.

 

They could be plotting some mischief,

They could throw a switch,

Like the men used to do on the rail line,

Heave on a lever and send the idea

Intended for a familiar destination

Off to somewhere entirely foreign,

Where satisfaction will be distrust,

Where the engines smoke and rattle and the tires

Lose their air in great, noisy expirations,

And the rotary telephone is the sole

Means of communication, if only

Someone knew how to use it.

© Dennis Hathaway

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