The Aberration of Youth
  
We liked to pretend we were dying. 
It felt invigorating to keep death close. 
Dying assured us we were, in fact, real 
to begin with and was sure to invoke 
sympathy by pairing all that we loved 
with the inevitability of its passing. 
  
We liked to play dead by the sides of the roads. 
One time we went as far as to 
squirt ketchup on our white t-shirts
hoping a car would stop to help us. 
We fantasized being picked up and 
nestled in the back seat of a Buick 
by unfamiliar, yet caring arms. 
  
We perfected falling down the stairs 
when our parents had company over. 
We liked to make memorable entrances, 
then spring up and take funny bows,
desperate for the acknowledgement 
that our very existences were in danger. 
  
We enjoyed pretending we were retarded 
by garbling our speech and ramming it 
through mishappened mouths, 
our faces a rictus of helplessness 
readily excusing us from all expectations 
and instantly surrounding us with 
the unconditional sympathy we craved. 
  
After watching The Miracle Worker 
on the late show, for days 
we went around wildly 
waving our outstretched arms 
as we bumped into furniture 
feeling our way through 
our own make-believe darknesses. 
Perhaps if we were blind 
we’d have been loved. 
  
We were fond of screaming 
in the neighbors back yards. 
We excelled at faking vomiting
by vibrating our fingers 
down the back of each other’s heads 
as if puke were slowly sliding down 
the hair onto the napes of the necks. 
  
Sometimes we froze like mannequins 
in the aisles of the local Pennies 
to spook old ladies and of course 
shock the shit out of strangers. 
At 10 we began running away from our homes
twice a week, staying away 
just long enough to spark guilt in someone. 
  
We were a pathetic ruse. 
  
We liked to walk down streets 
smoking fake cigarettes, 
blowing clouds of dental powder 
through straws with tin foil ends 
dipped in red ink. 
We lived to make tongues wag. 
  
At 14 we pretended we were witches 
by learning rituals and performing spells. 
We told friends we cleaned our rooms with magic. 
We’d point dead oak tree branches 
toward the sky, repeating rhymes 
with the intention of flying away. 
  
One time we made bombs
out of scraped off sparklers 
and gutted firecrackers, then buried 
them in cigar boxes in our backyards 
with fuses poking out of the ground. 
We lived to light those wicks
and blow up the whole lonely world. 
  
At 15 we drew hair under our armpits 
with our mother’s eyeliner pencils
then flirted with older men 
we saw in the apartment buildings 
across the way. 
Couldn’t they see we were now
young and old enough to be valued
for our bodies alone?
  
We kept wigs in our underwear drawers. 
We were known for staining our underpants 
with our nocturnal emissions. 
Our mother pinned them to 
the drapes when she hosted 
her bridge clubs in an attempt 
to shame and humiliate us. 
So we got even by humping our pillows
in the dark. 
  
We changed our rooms around weekly, 
once begging our mother to buy 
us a leopard skin bedspread. 
We were always plotting our escape. 
We fell in love with strangers so easily. 
We used to walk up to unfamiliar houses 
and ask to use the bathrooms 
longing for a taste of other lives. 
  
We drew freckles on our faces 
with red ink pens. 
We touched the end of thermometers
to hot light bulbs
to prove we had fevers. 
We died like Garbos in black and white. 
Our illnesses solely invented for 
staying home from things. 
  
We wore outlandish paisley bell bottoms 
our mother had sewn for us. 
We crawled through neighbor’s windows 
to jack their teenage sons off at night. 
We liked squishing marshmallows 
between our fingers to make taffy 
adding cocoa powder or Tang for pizazz. 
At night we’d make prank phone calls 
under the cum-stained sheets of our beds. 
  
We fantasized being institutionalized 
so that we might be taken care of 
for the rest of our lives. In band classes 
we pretended to play our instruments 
puffing our cheeks in and out to the music. 
We danced and sang to records 
alone in the subconscious of our basements. 
  
Though we grieved from day one, 
what had ever been there to make us sad?