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When I Flew MAG
When I flew
it was a solo flight
but I was not alone.
That esteemed friend was there
as always,
in my pockets
and my bones,
spoon-feeding life
in calculated gulps.
Strapped in tight,
make-shift plastic table folded outward,
diet coke jumped
and shifted with the turbulence.
It threatened to drench me, my
happy hot-pink tee-shirt
with the silver zipper.
I now know
that drink-spilling is far from
the worst fate a plane can meet
in life.
The couple in front discussed travel plans loudly,
providing free, non-stop entertainment
all the way to Nashville.
The place I thought would change my life.
The man flaunted gaudy gold rings
and draped his hairy arm
too possessively
around the woman.
The woman asked Mary The Flight Attendant
if she had a melon,
as though Mary paced the aisle daily
with a melon in her back pocket.
When the melon was denied her, she asked again
and my insides chuckled
to watch grown adults debate
a lifeless hunk of fruit.
The man kissed the woman on the cheek
as a consolation prize.
It was then I resolved
never to marry a man
who wore chunky gold rings in mass quantity
or cheesily-patterned shirts
too tight on the stomach.
When Mary cruised by to collect the jumpy cup,
she gave the whiny pair an extra pack
of airplane pretzels.
They grinned like kids on a birthday,
innocent.
Mary's smile was set like steel -
permanent, imprinted -
her face painted like a Barbie's
with a mouth of cakey matte cherry.
When the seatbelt sign clicked on
I peered out on a miniature Nashville
and made a wish on one last cloud
that Mary might know love
on land,
and all the earth
might take good care of her.
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