Selfish Girl

When I was five the world was good
and mortgages flowed like water. Didn’t matter

to me: I hadn’t yet learned to fear the bursting
of bubbles in slow stories told by graphs, but

I would. Still, I welted under a cinched-belt 
budget even then. Under my feet, my father

debugged code in the basement while I loafed
and watched the TV flicker. I saw stars

lose their shit and shave their heads and I
laughed. Planes hit towers again and again

like a stuck cassette. Men beheaded men, tanks
rolled into cities. All of it was distant. None 

of it mattered much to me. Oh, ignorant ecstasy 
of childhood: to hear the father of a friend

was found in his garage and not hear the rumble
of his exhaust pipe. To cry at the funeral

only because my heels were bleeding in their patent
leather prisons. My father only ever spanked me

once, when I kicked him three times in a row. 
You’re not the only one who feels, he told me.

Suze Kay (The Turning Leaf Journal

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