Monday, October 25, 2021

Rant

I don’t want to be old

I don’t want to make excuses 
About my unsteady step
I don’t want to turn and face 
Scary things inside my body. 

I don’t want to watch the watchers
No longer watching me
I don’t want them to say
Tsk, tsk, 
And shoot sly winking smiles
(Bet she was a looker when she was young)
At one another, as they ogle those 
Ungreying others in their quick strides 
Toward the myriad of their tasks,
Stumbles and surprises 
And I don’t want to be invisible
Like the old ladies drooling 
In their wheelchairs 
In the warehouses set up for them
In our cruel national repugnance
And nor do I
Want a special driver’s license,
Discounts to keep my teeth ship-shape,
My hearing keen, 
My any, many premiums at an all time low!
Call now! 

I don’t want the faux deference 
From a passel of hustlers looking
At me and thinking there must be a 
Way to make a buck or two. 
They have no idea how rage 
Turns to fire
And how I can and will
Obliterate their dreams, along with 
Anything else getting in my way

Don’t suggest it’s time to put in
An elevator to carry 
My looming infirmity upstairs
Do not reconfigure my 
House to match what some greedy 
Snake-oil salesmen would like to peddle—
Short of consignment to one
Of those places eating up any 
Legacy and fortune that will be left 
To the children—for I care not  
About someone else’s dreams, 
Of course, and by the way,
Fuck them, fuck them and 
Their coarse green dreams of dollars. 

Leave me alone. 
Do not patronize
Do not share a friendly elder joke
Do not turn in your delimitus 
Because you wish to avoid my belittling
You cannot see it coming, 
You cannot touch my power. 

And anyway, 
You won’t find me
And you won’t know me
And if you try 
You will spoil just like the 
Rotting apples on the ground
Of my autumn birthday 
And if somehow you see
The tracks of my shoes
In my muddy garden 
As I kick all that’s in my way
You will know, 
Because you read these lines, 
That every golden woman 
Fighting the platitudes and 
Cheap dismissive assignations 
That accumulate like leaves from
My Japanese maple just before they fall  
Is I. Is me. She. We. 
No graceful aging here, 
No airbrushed portrait, no giving in, 
No forgiving of assumptions and
No starting over in
The  constraints of time. 
None of this. None of that. 
No nothing but the raw edge of 
A life lived gasping for the breath
Of meaning and of relevance, 
Though knowing in the end 
It’s mostly dust, and the silvered,
Lonesome, wayward jangle of
A few stars along the way.