Homeless
Shelter Lamentation
by
D.C. Buschmann
You
come to me drunk,
expect
me to pretend
I
like your drunk self.
I
don’t
know
how to pretend
you
aren’t drunk,
that
you don’t remember
what
I just told you
five
minutes ago,
that
you don’t repeat
what
you just said
four
or five times.
I
don’t know how to
pretend
I don’t notice
your
alternate personality
IQ’s
80 points lower.
You
say I’m to blame.
I
tear into you
when
you’re the one
tearing.
I
don’t know how to
pretend
I don’t notice
you’ve
gone into a rage
because
I’m watching
a
show you don’t like.
Why
not just ask me
to
turn it?
You
expect me to pretend
I
don’t have a threshold
and
this isn’t beyond it.
You
expect me to pretend
with
you
that
you don’t drink.
You
expect me to pretend
I
like you drunk.
I
don’t.
* * * * *
D.C.
Buschmann is a retired editor and reading specialist. She was a finalist in the
2018 Poetry Society of Indiana’s Ogdon Award. Her poem, “Death Comes for a
Friend,” was the Editor’s Choice in Poetry Quarterly, Winter 2018.
In 2016, she was a finalist in the Alex Albright Creative Nonfiction Prize
contest and the Pride in Poetry Prize contest. She has been published in literary
magazines in the US, the UK, Australia, Iraq, and India. She lives in Carmel,
Indiana, with husband Nick and miniature schnauzers Cupcake and Coco. Her
first full collection of poetry will be published in 2020.
Hurray for you!
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