it doesn’t get any easier, even if you keep a straight faceA Poem by Philip GaberThe Wrong Rev wore a Dacron shirt, and began the eulogy by kissing a statue of the Buddha. “Brothers and sisters,” he said. “The lonely, tragic hoarders and haters are among us!” The mourners in the back pews flicked their Bics and threw their damn hands up. That’s when I excused myself. I was a little cranky. I needed a smoke. I stood outside by a statue of a menopausal Mary; she looked fatigued as if she were In the Shadow of a Compromise. There was a shabby but respectable hotel across the street with undergraduate memories of ashen-faced blondes in smocked dresses and tweed blazers, who were cheek-deep in existential despair and complaining of “precarious nervous conditions.” There were secrets hidden within those walls and layers of pain, too. I considered checking in but was experiencing Oscillations of Faith. I finished my smoke, tossed it on the ground, and stamped it out. Looking back over my shoulder into the Sanctuary, (I’d left the door open), I noticed the Wrong Rev was sweating, and trying to get hold of the dearly departed soul. “You were but a bubble on a puddle,” he said. “A bubble that spluttered on a puddle.” I’d heard enough. I walked home, laid down on my bed, dreamed of delusions of morality, and didn’t crack an eye until 11 o’clock the following morning. © 2024 Philip Gaber |
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Added on June 7, 2024 Last Updated on June 7, 2024 AuthorPhilip GaberCharlotte, NCAboutI hate writing biographies. I was one of those kids who rode a banana seat bike and watched Saturday morning cartoons and Soul Train. But my mother would never buy any of those sugary cereals for us k.. more..Writing
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