my mother hugged the man with a steel guitar heart that Christmas Eve;
I will never stop asking this world:
why must some souls grow to be so lonely?
handshakes instead of hugs
brittle bones begging for longevity
hair needle-spun from Halley's comet
off-white walls hold hands with obsolete photographs
home of the expired living
fluorescent lights bounce off blue veins
thrums stirring young hearts trapped in old bodies
repetition hymn of heartache falling out of bleached teeth
open hearts, listening ears, patient feet grounded in folding chairs
some questions don't have answers yet,
so in the meantime I'll live by theory
heal his heart with the peach orchards that held the sun
fogs of nicotine coating turquoise carpet
gardenias guarding the sidewalk
dinosaur fossil show and tell
hugs instead of handshakes
I sometimes wish I was an earthquake, I'd uproot all this heartache; you know I would.
Although, no matter the age,
or how much the strums of a lifetime may sting;
you cannot mistake this God gifted music
(I could not find the name of this photo or the photographer)