sitting
in this greasy, all night, Michigan redneck, café
sipping
on dark stale coffee,
listening
to the local philosophers, as they eat their breakfast,
on
their way to dry-walling and other assorted craft jobs,
indoors
of course, getting to cold for outside work,
discussing
the beating death of a Wyoming fag (their word),
and
how the poor ole boys who did it will never get a fair trial,
what
with all the negative publicity,
and
what is this world coming too,
when
you can’t even bash a few fags around
and
get away with it,
after
all, they was just having a little fun,
they
didn’t actually mean to kill the little fucker, chuckles all around;
listening, the thought
occurs,
that
with just a different twist of fate,
I
could be sitting at that table,
with
all the other small town know-it-alls,
discussing
world politics and Wyoming fags,
and
it is only now that I realize,
I
don’t belong here anymore,
just
as the swamplands and muskrats of south jersey
do
not belong here,
this
place I once called home, has become just another town,
full
of strangers I no longer know,
nor
care too;
this place leaves me
feeling emptyand impotent;
I think of my wife,
the
woman who has been with me
for
more years than I once lived in this place,
the
woman whose touch still electrifies me,
the
woman who has become my one constant,
my
only reality,
the
one thing I can depend on,
together
we have built a new home,
she
is where I belong;
she is my home.
.
.
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