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Replying to a comment on:
Doesn't Take Much (Free verse) by Plaidypus
Here I am again, at Big Lots
Look: Decorative Garden Trowel, $2.49
thatâs a steal
I think of:
first, the plastic, molten
and grossly over-opaque pink
think pepto-bismal or whole milk
and HOT,
ejaculated under high pressure into a steal mold
which hissed, seconds later,
and the part popped right out
into the robotic hand that waited with
a miraculous pause
identical to the one before it
and the one before it
now this garden trowel sits proudly on the shelf
clean, brave; ready to be soiled in conquest
It has decorative floral stenciling.
It has a name.
Where to, next?
There are hundreds of possibilities; thousands!
the patio lanterns
the âLemonadersâ
the wrench sets, and bright, new bathroom towels
all waiting to be picked up and brought to a happy home
I feel eternally hungry
Time to stop procrastinating.
Stepping slightly sideways,
I make my way over towards the bathroom/hygiene section
to get what it was I came for:
paper towels, tissues, and toilet paper
there will be no bumble-bee weather vanes, or neon plastic tumblers for
me today
a little boy scoots past me
waving a toy on a cell-packed card
his mother takes it from him,
rests it delicately in the top shelf of her cart
below, in the big belly basket
she has: window cleaner, an embroidered pillow,
a desk lampâone of those,
high up, with their heads turned down
I allow myself to gaze againâjust for a second
at the promising colors, the honest attempts at affordable quality
Thinking,
If only I had a couch. If only I had a real kitchen, a lawnâ¦
There is no family back home,
no tired husband, or growing little boy
Surely, I am just another gluttonous American, solitary,
driving two blocks further to save a buck
And the lady at the checkout stand is so nice,
she asks me if I want my toilet paper
double-bagged,
because she understands how embarrassing it can be
âAre you sure?â as I kindly deny her offer
âOh, itâll be fine,â I say
a man walks in with three children just then
heâs holding hands with two
as the third, the oldest
trails slightly behind
Big Lots
Aisles and aisles of plastic crap.
It doesnât even stop at the check-out:
Here is the furniture section
chairs for inside, chairs for outside
for the patio, for the lawn
juxtaposed cheerily with more plastic tumblers
They might as well be winking at me from up in heaven.
In this land of accommodation and comfort
A spectrum of choices, and bright-eyed bargains
What does it take to be happy?
As I leave, Iâm thinking:
it doesnât take much.
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