The Sky Regrets to Inform You, It’s Tired of Feeling Judged

for EB

Because you complained that poets weren’t telling you anything

new about sky, I slit open its white wrists with a kite and made the fog

explain itself. When the sky didn’t know how to react, I spoke

to the honeymooners on the beach, We’ve been married for 12 tweets.

And the sky rolled its one yellow eye. We are all dying here.

The ozone layer has gone goth and is listening to Morrissey.

All the middle-age women are sucking on something

that will spark joy. Be wine. Be joints. Be the places

where pleasure lives between its heartbeats. It doesn’t matter

if we’re cranky because we can’t get it right. The sky is reflecting

in the pond, in the eyes of a girl who wears her Starry Night

sweatshirt as she floats between stargrass. So meta. We were young

once and we begged for something more, the moon like a locket

we could pop open, the stars like the fireflies we couldn’t catch

in a dark swamp, but when morning came and we knew

we made it, overnight after the nice girls had gone home,

the blue blanket tucked under our thighs, and jeans tossed

against some picnic table—there was no language other than fabric,

a belief we’d be okay in a pocket, a galaxy of denim blue.