This is the part of the movie where the highway is near-
empty at midnight. A song plays quietly as lamplight
reflects off passing windshields into a procession of glowing
specks. The camera pans so the driver’s face is obscured
and daylight’s debris stumbles over the skyline.
This is all the audience sees. Instead imagine it:
the most important kind of sadness. Your clothes
always folded and the bed always made, you do this
because there is an existential understanding—
it’s the routine that saves us. Go to school,
climb into a career, cater to a couple hobbies,
and life becomes passing time until your telomeres
shorten past a point of no return.
In the background the narrator repeats
the cruel joke of walking down the same street
for the thousandth time and expecting to be happy.
In the foreground the car remains lonely in transit,
your lover doesn’t love you anymore, your allegiance
to the algorithm is long gone and the choice is there—
you could keep driving into oblivion or a new distraction
or maybe pull the steering wheel into the wreck-
come-too-soon, but the virtue of turning around
still appeals to you.
© J. David
J. David is from Cleveland, Ohio and serves as poetry editor for Flypaper Magazine.
Find J. David on twitter: @LookingAtLilacs