Monday, March 16, 2015

A Poem By TOM SLEIGH (Terminally Re-formatted)

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 SECOND SIGHT

 In my fantasy of fatherhood, in which I'm
 your real father, not just the almost dad
 arriving through random channels of divorce,
 you and I don't lie to one another—
 shrugging each other off when words
 get the best of us but coming
 full circle with wan smiles.

 When you hole up inside yourself,
 headphones and computer screen
 taking you away, I want to feel in ten years
 that if I'm still alive you'll still look
 at me with that same wary expectancy,
 your surreptitious cool-eyed appraisal
 debating if my love for you is real.

 Am I destined to be those shark-faced waves
 that my death will one day make you enter?

 You and your mother make such a self-sufficient pair—
 in thrift stores looking for your prom dress,
 what father could stand up to your unsparing eyes
 gauging with such erotic calculation
 your figure in the mirror? Back of it all, when I
 indulge my second sight, all I see are dead zones:
 no grandchildren, no evenings at the beach, no bonfires
 in a future that allows one glass of wine
 per shot of insulin. Will we both agree
 that I love you, always, no matter
 my love's flawed, aging partiality?
 My occupation now is to help you be alone. 
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