Why does no one write weight gain poetry? |
I I'm getting older now. Not by a lot, but it's there. Others notice I think. No longer bold and fresh, but shaped and set. But, when I look in the mirror: Ah, the rolling, foothills of the spine, reaching out to the cove of the waist, and soft, slight, jetties of hip and bust, Rising, curving, Into a ravenstorm of hair And distant eyes, threatening rain. It's shameful But Like my terrible ancestors Of the gun and sword, I look lustfully upon this holy land. I want more. It's sunday, May the Seventh. The scale reads one-hundred and ten. A willowy sylph. I need more. II As you get older, (Even in your twenties you can feel it) your skein begins to shrink. Life can only knit you into so few things with what remains. the stitch is clear the remaining color, Apparent; No more sudden flourishes that could Inspire, or even Repulse, a waiting recipient or admiring onlooker. No. Not me. I'll frog myself when life turns. I am not so kinked that I can't be reworked. I'll steal myself away, and make myself into a Tapestry of my own Design. I made a change. Today, I look upon life with a burgeoning hunger. Now, I'll always be sweet of tooth and quick to bite. Always, I'll lick my fingers and my plate. And my body will grow to contain my furtive Lust. I will live deliciously. It's wednesday, May the Tenth. The scale reads one-hundred and twelve. Another halfnotch of the belt. I need more. |