Margaret has Visions
My thoughts tickle my brain rummaging
through the deeper ravine of gray matter.
My mother stands over me with a heavy hammer
determined to claw my brains from my head.
She’s youthful, glamorous even after all these years
when I last saw her catnapping in the casket
with smooth skin, flawless and glowing. Glowing more now.
Her voice is still the same, no raspiness from age;
The rage in her voice softened enough to dissuade fear.
She hired people to build inroads through and out my brain,
and installed movie clips to flash in front of my eyes
like suggestions and recommendations—what and how to do.
She programmed sentences in my head as random as a
cake collapsed at her wedding like a megaphone in my ears
suggesting malfeasants of the messiest essence.
Heavy drill equipment operators pound my head relentlessly
like a sledgehammer, sledgehammer …
sledge … sledgehammer over and over on my skull
fracturing small pieces, exploding and covering the walls
I’m bleeding red, I’m bleeding orange, bleeding red.
I wake in a field of wildflowers and grasses covering my head
rolling in the wind; I walk into fields wearing a tattered dress
and discover the poppies have dotted the meadow;
and fluffy kittens play with tails swishing like a flickering flame.