An
Unwanted Choice
“Either
you are with us, or you are with the terrorists.”
With
those words,
George
W. Bush drew
a
line in the sand
and
told every Muslim in America
to
pick a side:
ally
or enemy,
country
or faith,
America
or Islam.
Why?
Why
were Muslims forced
into
a false dichotomy
when
no other
religious
group was?
Christians
weren’t;
Jews
weren’t;
Hindus,
Buddhists, and Sikhs weren’t.
So why only Muslims then?
On A Late Summer Sunday Night
“Emails” by Yung Lean is
playing through my headphones.
I take another sip of
Blue Moon beer as I stare
at the hazy orange streetlight
outside of my bedroom window.
The streets are quiet tonight;
a rare occasion. I go to the
bathroom to piss and return to
finish the beer. My third one so
far.
I lay down on my firm mattress.
As I ponder this present situation,
the alcohol performs its
sleep-inducing magic. I take off
my headphones, close my eyes, and
float away into soporific bliss.
A Poem Inspired by Cowboy
Bebop
My left eye gazes at the
past
while my right eye views
the present.
Because of this split
focus, I fail
to create a future for myself.
Thursday Morning
The white daffodils are
starting to rot.
I notice them from
my bathroom window as
I get ready for work,
After brushing my teeth,
I pause and look at
myself in the mirror:
forehead lines, bags
under
my eyes, a receding
hairline,
and a slight muffin top.
Ten years may go by
fast,
but they leave a few
marks.
Oh, well. I finish
getting
dressed, grab my coat,
and
head to my car. Once
inside,
I glance at the
daffodils
and see a white petal
fall
to the ground. Then, I
start my
car and drive off to
work.
The day continues its usual march.
A.Y.
Not much has changed for
him since high school.
He still lives in his
grandmother’s house,
still works a dead-end
retail job at the mall,
and still runs with the
same circle in
his hometown. He also
quit community college
after just three
semesters. Thus, his world matches
the size of his
ambition: small and limited.
It’s almost sad that
this 29-year-old “man”
maintains the life of a
suburban teenage boy.
Yet, this is what he
wants: freedom from
responsibility,
struggle, and growth (i.e. adulthood).
He’s a classic case of
Peter Pan syndrome,
but with a bad haircut.
Even if it’s not
visible to him, other
people can clearly see it.
They move forward with
their adult concerns
while he remains stuck
in stagnation. His
only plan for the future
involves
living off his
grandmother’s inheritance
once she passes.
Meanwhile, he spends his nights
perusing Pornhub,
Instagram, and Twitch




