Tastes like Stardust
The path beyond
our garden
leads
where daylight
won’t tread
where she follows
with eyes that beg
for relief I live
to provide
touching her where
her lean suggests
spinning circles
where her breath
catches and skips
and lingers
her heartbeat
tastes like stardust,
moonbeams and
Venus dimples
I am her
percussionist;
steadily I drum
readily as a duet
is hummed to
an audience
of two
I exist as
both composer and
her instrument to strum
or tease a bar
or two
she is my music
I am her best verse
our groove
not nearly as harsh
as I’m able
or she wants,
but firm enough
to shift firmament
and furniture
where leeway
yields
to leverage,
not leaning into
the strong force or
dark energy,
but as she sheens,
slick from my sweat,
she knows I’m there
***
Written for NaPoWriMo Day 13 prompt:
…write a poem in which the words or meaning of a familiar phrase get up-ended. For example, if you chose the phrase “A stitch in time saves nine,” you might reverse that into something like: “a broken thread; I’m late, so many lost.” Or “It’s raining cats and dogs” might prompt the phrase “Snakes and lizards evaporate into the sky.” Those are both rather haunting, strange images, and exploring them could provide you with an equally haunting, strange poem (or a funny one!)
In all honesty, this prompt left me a bit lost. When I tried in earnest, I was left writing nonsensical garbage. I didn’t give up though; I shifted focus and tried writing about a known event between consenting adults in a new way. It’s not quite up-ended, but I’m ok with the result.