His mother kept telling him to get a job. He still listened to his mother.
He worked. He worked in an auto-shop learning lubes and fine-tuning-
Until they stopped making them
like they used to.
His father used to
drink alcohol like a liquor store sprinter. Naturally, he got thirsty too, and drank
and stank the same as his father, his mother would say every day.
Grease or oil, bitter battery acid or brake fluid and gin,
and all over again, the evolved monkey man
with the sooty stained hands that exclude him from white paper work, shows silver
linings along his brow.
Every now and then he picks up a brush, a ladder, a little girl and moves just a stroke away
from happiness in his days. His mother said she prays for him.
He should have picked up a shovel or an ice pick, manners or a real lady,
but is too weak to make them work
for him.
He falls into a five year hole.
He comes out in smooth pieces,
none fit tight and his well-being wont hold water, slipping on surfaces,
He is sees light
And knows he is being saved for another life, another
day to die, his mother said ladies first when he listened.
The old lady in a broken down car, pulled over on the roadside waves for help,
it is all white and frozen, steam surrounds her.
The mechanic stops
himself for a moment
before moving on,
simply too skinny to spare anything-
a white canvas, waiting for him to return
the favor.
Painting by Jacob Jordaens, The Satyr and the peasants (1620) in [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.
Painting by Jacob Jordaens, The Satyr and the peasants (1620) in [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.
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