Miscommunication
The meals at my house
never sing a tune of
steamed asparagus over
a brew of hot, hot
vegetable juice filled
with raw potato shavings;
a poor man clinging
to the edge of the kitchen stove,
burning his hands to warm them.
Father’s pressing fate
of high cholesterol
and amputated limbs ignored-
a game of who gets the last Twinkie turns
into a game of who gains the most.
Mother shames me
for swallowing too quickly,
“At least twenty times.”
Now I refuse to eat in public because...
I eat whatever is placed in front of me,
chicken and rice,
peas or green beans- all the goods
tasting of the blood and sweat sacrificed
to bag them, store them in a factory,
ship them down the aisles
of a Wal-Mart Superstore.
But every time I read an article about
nutrition,
I am left with a crisis:
Each morning I forget
that breakfast is the most important meal
of the day.
Each night I forget
that my plate should be colorful,
not bland and packed with starches.
And every time I visit my dad
I forget to warn him of
his high risk behaviors.
Honestly,
I can’t remember the last time we
had a serious conversation.
He doesn't own a dinner table,
so whenever he makes a plate,
he drags his swollen feet up
the steps to his bedroom
and eats alone.
I see from below
his TV lights flicker
and I realize I've never eaten
like a rich man either:
surrounded by those
he thinks are his friends.
At least his table is never
empty.