No One to
Know
by Jen Schneider
Invisibility,
I know you. By name. You are:
… a seat at
the center of a rectangular table for twelve as animated voices float over and
around your seat.
… a solitary
soul alone in a crowded room full of pairs and groups of three.
… the utterance
a sound – Hello – that is never heard.
… clothes a
mix of red, burgundy, and orange hues that blend just right – complement your
complexion – but which remain hidden under a jacket – a size too small –
that was never removed.
… to sit on
a crowded train – delayed – with no AC – holding an antique
typewriter – with keys that neither click nor clack – that demands ribbon no
longer manufactured.
…a
disconnected landline listed in directories near and far. All seven digits and
a spelling error – a before e – in your very common first name.
… struggles
to swallow a softly steamed broccoli stem. Bitter. A vegetable you’ve
always disliked.
… cough,
breathe a sigh of relief when the passage clears, and realize no one noticed.
… offers of
an eight-letter Scrabble word – not telling, sorry – that no one
recognizes or approves.
… memorized
jokes – Knock, Knock, Who’s There – that are never told.
… pauses to
view yourself in the mirror but not recognize who you see.
… to want
nothing more than to be anywhere else but here. But to have nowhere else to go.
… to have so
much to say but nothing anyone wants to hear.
… to see
people everywhere but know no one.
And have No
One to Know.
* * * * *
Jen Schneider is an
educator, attorney, and writer. She lives, writes, and works in small spaces
throughout Philadelphia. Recent work appears in The Popular Culture Studies
Journal, Toho Journal, The New Verse News, Zingara Poetry Review, Streetlight
Magazine, Chaleur Magazine, LSE Review of Books, and other literary and
scholarly journals.
While and nodding and grinning affirmatively, I nearly choked on the broccoli stem...and the loneliness.
ReplyDeleteI relate, somewhat. Much food for thought! Thank you!
ReplyDelete