Dinner Table
My dinner table tells time.
In the early mornings, it is a sundial
A chronograph watch
With long shadows cast by three ceramic mugs
(All of different sizes
For the father, mother and child)
And one person at any given time.
As the sun drags over the sky
The wooden table ages in colour
Streaks of light and dark brown run over the scratches
Like reassuring fingers, and it's not unlike the time
It's been left outside
Not even a garage sale sticker to its name
For some struggling family
Who didn't care about looks
To haul it inside.
Afternoons blur with
Pencil tapping, eraser shavings, draining dishes and cooking experiments
A device always
Perhaps two people sharing the kitchen
Shuffling alongside the other.
Then evening settles in
The cloak of night that swaddles warmth inside, though
A one-bedroom apartment
Has plenty of space
For dinner plates to rotate;
Never more than two
(It's usually the couple)
Who sit opposite of each other
While their kid eats somewhere
The dinner table can't see
For it has only two eyes
Marked by cutlery and leftovers.
And then the table is wiped
And the light is turned off
As everyone goes their separate ways
And the dinner table
Doesn't know how
To gather three plates together
Has it gone blind?
To not see this coming
How it'll tell time when no one is here
It does not know
As the living room clock
Is broken beyond repair.
I couldn't stop thinking about this. Despite being indoors, I've talked to my family less and less. I need to remember to give them a hug tonight.
On a happier note, thank you to my poetry readers for sticking around. It really means a lot that you're reading my poems. <3 I think this is the most people I've gotten at one time (3! 3 constant readers, all in the same day!).
Bạn đang đọc truyện trên: Truyen247.Pro