I Don't Need Permission to Dirge But

 

Image description: three panels of wood, seemingly worn down with dark smudges.

By Amanda Gaines

 

on the hottest day of the summer, my body decides

to fucking lose it.        Wails

 

on a phone line to its beloved, daydreams

colliding into a brick wall at fifty MPH, abandons

 

the house of a best friend without explanation.         I wish I could explain

the fleas burrowing beneath my wood floors,                        the torn hole

 

in the tire of my lemony Volkswagen,          the accordion list

of unsent emails & academic protocols & untended sisters

 

a thousand miles from me back east, the partly part-time job

I picked up to keep the lights on.       My fear of being too much & never

 

enough.          Truth, a friend tells me, isn’t confession. Desire

usually does the trick.                         I try--I want to watch my man

 

bike down a black diamond

in sexy silver leggings. To play Two-Dots & eat ice cream, to give

 

my stretch marks beautiful girl names. To book it

back to Appalachia, to find a small cabin stocked with bath bombs

 

& cheese puffs & VHS copies of horror movies to help me

sleep.               With a disco ball & speaker system that bumps

 

Pinkshift on repeat.     With every stuffed animal I’ve ever kissed

on the forehead without shame.

 

In the real, rain plays withholding.     Girls I once dropped

it low with in hot pants get married to mediocre men.           My sister

 

buys her first car & I am not there     to witness her smile

overshadow the skyline.         My mother texts me

 

You can always come home.   I pull out

my hair in a feedback loop, leave evidence of loss

 

everywhere I go.         I want to scream

in an empty room until my esophagus splits its seams.         To pretend

 

I still have a say over my future.        To be held

like a child, to have nothing

 

to prove. To don stilettos & get in a bar fight with J.D Vance

knowing the right kind of hooked anger

 

can bring any bully to their knees. To feel the pressure of a tongue

between my legs,       look down

 

& find my man ordering take-out.      My idea of luxury:

not begging for what I need.   How luxurious it would be

 

to paint my nails with glitter in candle-lit room with friends & talk

art, fearless.     A luxury: a self-cleaning stove, a heart

 

that can give without breaking.          A storm cloud that lingers

over my Oklahoma threshold, promising

 

Not soon--now.


 

Amanda Gaines is an Appalachian writer and Ph.D. candidate in CNF in Oklahoma State University's creative writing program. Her poetry and nonfiction are published or awaiting publication in Barrelhouse, Willow Springs, Redivider, New Orleans Review, Southeast Review, The Southern Review, Juked, Rattle, Pleiades, SmokeLong Quarterly, Ninth Letter, and Superstition Review.