Truckers, do not be fooled
It’s not that I want to be mauled by a mountain lion, but I can imagine less fitting
deaths. We read every warning sign as an extraordinary measure of caution. This
practice must catch up with time. Anyway, warning advice only convinces you
your hands and body are worthwhile, can do something in a crisis. In truth an
advancing bear will advance, a mountain lion will shoot out and grab your dumb
face in its flawless jaw without you knowing it was there. I don’t say this to scare
but so we can make peace. If you must die, eventually, and you are a lover of
cats… Imagine your body as pieces you can offer up to the sky and earth upon
your death. Where would you place each limb? Where would you lie down your
pretty head?
Landscape is Partly about Who You Are
The cutest mammals are killers of the right things. My cat takes an unmistakable
pleasure in eviscerating a lizard. I moved him from lizards and he eviscerates
nothing, but cries, maniacally to be combed. Dogs look at you with their sad dog
eyes. A neighborhood is defined by the park it surrounds. When you go out into
the neighborhood, do you feel a part of it? Or a passer-through leering at other
people’s ripe gardens? And when you sit on your porch? One type of anxiety is
reading your book intently so as not to say hello. Another is knowing the lock
sounds of all your neighbors’ cars. Another lying awake at night with pains you
invent, never convinced of their unreality. I woke last week too many times and
stayed woken, bathed. The doorknob broke off the bathroom door and I resigned
myself to live there forever. Old linoleum became my neighborhood and I
wondered how to exist always in a hard place. To free yourself from anywhere,
you must remember simple machines. I do not mean your hands, but that’s a
start.
biography
CAROLINE CABRERA is author of The Bicycle Year (H_NGM_N BKS 2015), Flood Bloom (H_GNM_N BKS 2013), and the chapbook Dear Sensitive Beard (dancing girl press 2012). She lives in Denver.