Against Pleasure

Robin Becker

 
Worry stole the kayaks and soured the milk.
Now, it’s jellyfish for the rest of the summer
and the ozone layer full of holes.
Worry beats me to the phone.
Worry beats me to the kitchen,
and all the food is sorry. Worry calcifies
my ears against music; it stoppers my nose
against barbecue. All films end badly.
Paintings taunt with their smug convictions.
In the dark, Worry wraps her long legs
around me, promises to be mine forever.
Thugs hijacked all the good parking spaces.
There’s never a good time for lunch.
And why, my mother asks, must you track
beach sand into the apartment?
No, don’t bother with books,
not reading much these days.
And who wants to walk the boardwalk anyway,
with scam artists who steal your home and savings?
Watch out for talk that sounds too good to be true.
You, she says pointing at me,
don’t worry so much.
 
From Domain of Perfect Affection © 2006. All rights are controlled by the University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh, PA 15260. Used by permission of the University of Pittsburgh Press.

Poems by This Author

Angel Supporting St. Sebastian by Robin Becker
Shot with arrows and left for dead
Great Sleeps I Have Known by Robin Becker
Once in a cradle in Norway folded
Man of the Year by Robin Becker
My father tells the story of his life


Further Reading

Poems about Stealing
After
by T. R. Hummer
America
by Claude McKay
Cahoots
by Carl Sandburg
Learning to Read
by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Museum Guard
by David Hernandez
Some People
by Wislawa Szymborska
Stealing The Scream
by Monica Youn
The Man Whose Voice Has Been Taken From His Throat
by Naomi Shihab Nye
The Not-Yet Child
by Joshua Weiner