Self-Serving
Self Portrait
This
ain’t a complaint.
I’m
not the grousing type
(ask
anyone).
But
I have, let’s face it,
had
some kind of life!
Been
depressed a lot,
before
everyone was;
Now,
of course,
these
days of strife
touch
almost all of us.
Yet
there also have been boons.
Life
has its wonders:
The
ocean, sex,
sausage
pizza. I allow
that
it’s not all bad but
I
would, even very young
fall
frequently into
the
abyss so many are
now
so familiar with:
Why
get out of bed?
Why
look for work?
Why
not get wrecked?
A
quick summary of me:
tough
teenage years,
lazy,
weedy twenties,
frightened
thirties.
Then
things looked up:
good
college, good job,
good
woman. Vermont.
Then,
of course, things
looked
down, as they tend
to
do with time:
lost
job, lost woman,
Rhode
Island.
Fear
of death, or longing for it,
what’s
the dif?
It’s
all part of the plan.
As
my ex-boss Hyman
(“Hy?”
“Hi.”)
used
to say from the height
of
his forklift
when
I worked
at
fifteen
in
a warehouse full of
Clairol
products,
“Am
I right or am I right?”
Alec Solomita is a writer and artist working
in the Boston (USA) area. His fiction has appeared in the Southwest Review, The Mississippi Review, Southword Journal, and Peacock, among
other publications. He was shortlisted by the Bridport Prize and Southword
Journal. His poetry has appeared in Poetica, Lothlorien Poetry Journal,
Litbreak, Driftwood Press, Anti-Heroin Chic, The Galway Review, The Lake,
and elsewhere, including several anthologies. His photographs and drawings can
be found in Convivium, Fatal Flaw, Young Ravens
Review, Tell-Tale Inklings, and other publications. He took the
cover photo and designed the cover of his poetry chapbook, “Do Not Forsake Me,”
which was published in 2017. His full-length poetry book “Hard To Be a Hero,”
came out last spring. He's working on another.
Hope things are going well for you at the moment as the moment is all we have.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
Delete