The Engine

 

I remember walking to the bus stop as a kid,


My shoes crushing saturated leaves


The roar of the tired engine,


Wheels rounding the corner lazily



Rain dotted the windshield,


The same way fear dotted my mind


Scratches on the side of the bus,

 

Reflected in me a darker time



Here I am some years later,


Age twenty and out of school


I can still hear it from my window,


The tired engine still roaring through



Rain still dots the windshield,


And fear still dots my mind


The scratches have turned into scars,

 

And the darkness inside has resigned



I walk to the mailbox today,


Coffee crushing sleep in my eyes


The roar of the tried and true engine,


Still hisses, sputters, and sighs



Rain still dots my windshield,


And resignation dots my heart


Confined to a copy and paste life,


The ignition struggles to start



Here I am in the present,


Unsure of what day it is that I exist


My mind’s transfixed on exhaustion,


As I watch the engine’s smoke rise and twist



Rain still dots the windshield,


And ambiguity still dots my mind,


The scars have turned into scratches,


And the darkness has begun to unwind



Now I lay underground,


Crushed by concrete and grass


The engine today no longer roars:


It only echoes in the past



Rain still dots the windshield,


The same way time lost still dots my soul


Though no longer earthbound,


The rain inside took its toll

 


Here I am thirty years later,


A memory and nothing more


The dissonant screams of the engine,


Have been forgotten and are no more



Rain used to dot the windshield,


The same way pain used to dot my life


Scratches and scars disintegrated,


No reminder that I once was alive

 





 

 

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