Friday, September 14, 2012

A Million Days Hanging On The Edge Of A Calendar


He knew it was over. No words were needed. No pieces of paper that try to squeeze a thousand different feelings into something which holds such limited boundaries. Her eyes told the story. He looked away for a brief second. Afraid. As if the person in front of him were some unwanted beggar on the street corner. Shock quickly filled his heart and then, like a pricked balloon, slowly deflated, spreading that feeling of complete helplessness throughout his soul. He looked back at her with sudden hopes this was all just a dream. But her eyes told the story. In a thousand languages he didn’t understand but understood all the same. He stood on the sidewalk, staring into those eyes. The same eyes he had admired so many beautiful days and so many wondrous nights. So many times he had stared deeply into them and felt himself a part of that wonder and beauty. A oneness. A stillness, deep and dark. Haunting and beautiful. Unreal and comforting. He watched an opaque tear slowly grow in size until it hung like a million days on the edge of a calendar. Deeply seeded intentions swelled up inside the silence of the tear and the roar of the million days consumed him to the point he couldn’t bear listening or seeing the tear any longer.
He reached up and wiped it from her face. He gently kissed her on the forehead, turned with one last look, and walked away from her toward forever, holding the tear in his fingers.

© 2012, Walter Tupelo

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

untitled



i always thought
the loneliest sound
i ever heard
was a train whistle
at two in the morning
until i heard you crying
from the other room

© 2012, Walter Tupelo


Saturday, August 25, 2012

grocery shopping


yesterday i went grocery shopping
i accidentally bumped my shopping cart
into a lady’s shopping cart about my age
the lady that is
the shopping cart was much older
her hair was the color of aisle six and
her lipstick matched the ground sirloin 
in the meat section perfectly
we stood by the cantaloupes and talked for
fifteen minutes before she asked my name
walter, i said, not trying to make it sound too much
like i was stocking shelves
and your name? i inquired of her
tree, she said, quite matter of factly
do you have any children? i flipped out another coupon
yes, I have three children, she said
branch, twig, and stem
before i left the store, i bought a plant

©2012, Walter Tupelo

green


you left your mark on my heart
you scribbled with a green crayon
and connected all the dots until
it turned into your coloring book
you tore out some of the pages and
taped them onto your refrigerator
for all the kitchen to see 
how fine an artist you had become
but you forgot about the pictures 
you left behind

©2012, Walter Tupelo

formal frock


i know a woman
who accouterments in affluent alliteration
she must have matching attire
for every day of the year

©2012, Walter Tupelo

no one home prelude


when I think about calling you
i get all nervous inside
like emptiness imploded
inside my stomach
leaving a crater filled with
every hope and fear that will fit
inside an emptiness bomb

©2012, Walter Tupelo

summer afternoon religion


i’m stranded in an automobile
some side road traveled years ago and
the weeds outside the car are taller than god
it’s summer and blistering heat
i sit in the front seat
massaging the greasy steering wheel
as species of cricketanoisea
sing outside the windows in
seven point one cinema theatre sound
there’s a pond called rileys
not much farther up this gravel road where
all the fish like to get drunk on the weekends
and i wish I had a cigarette
as i sit in the front seat waiting for jesus to mow


©2012, Walter Tupelo