The Stir of Your Avoided Life
Vincent Guerra | Poetry
You didn’t wake
in dewy blue bitter
panic or prairie
june or spangle grass—
no field, no shopping-
cart encampment
of tarpaulin and toddler’s
clothes—though wet-
eyed,
though whelmed
in bottled-
up a.m. light, your
lungs confined like tidal
anemone or beds
of strawberries tucked
in their black plastic
sheeting. You can
get used to almost
anything—strip mall
flowers for startle, a sit-com
for cloister—you
can go entire
days without feeling
anything at all.
No one’s your
rouser, no one
your awful salts;
calm is
an alarm in a beige
waiting room—is you,
the alarm.
Vincent Guerra grew up in northern California, and currently resides in Tallahassee, Florida, where he teaches writing and serves as the poetry editor of Juked. His recent work has appeared, or is forthcoming, in Boston Review, Narrative, FIELD, The Southern Review, Denver Quarterly, Washington Square, and New California Writing 2013.