Monday, November 14, 2022

When the Oaf Faced Linoleum

He stepped to me

Big as a house,

But I knew in his heart

He was small as a mouse.

 

His daddy got rich

Selling exotic cars,

So, he puffed out his chest,

Like he was the star.

But daddy’s money

Didn’t make him a man,

And his trophy wife mamma

Was busy working her tan.

 

Then here I come walking,

Pacing myself as I go.

My life was exhausting,

But he didn’t know

What it’s like to commute

Across the class divide,

And work like a dog

While your worlds collide.

No, he didn’t know

And he didn’t care,

But I didn’t mind.

Already knew life ain’t fair.

I was born to a standing

Destined for grease,

But blessed with a mind

To unbend my knees.

I was playing the cards

That were lain on my table.

We are none of us born equal.

We just do what we’re able.

Life had engendered me fortune

And I was trying my best.

All that other noise,

Was better left for the rest.

Say what you will.

Hurl your slurs at me,

Hemmed in by status

While I’m walking free.

I don’t need privilege

To know what I’m worth.

My momma done told me

At home, from her hearth.

 

Well, nothing intimidates

Like a confident dude.

It so irritates trolls

That they become rude.

So, he said what he said

Trying to get under my skin,

But I just shrugged it off

And he couldn’t win.

Next, he picked up a backpack

To throw at my head.

Well, that crossed a line

And snipped at my thread.

 

I caught that thing

Straight out of the air.

I questioned his intent

And leveled a stare.

Gone drunk on bravado

He cursed me some more.

Then I tossed back the pack

And put him down on the floor.

 

I don’t condone violence

As a first option to seed,

But its still a tool in my kit

For whenever I need.

As I charged in that moment

The fear hit his eye,

And I knew in short order

He’d become a pliable guy.

I became an instrument

Of my aggressor’s regret.

You reap what you sow,

And you get what you get.

 

I sat on his ass

Pinned his face to the tile

Twisted his arm back

And spoke with a smile.

The linoleum was polished

And shiny with wax.

My tone was determined

As I laid out the facts.

Said I, “Don’t be mistaken

If I may seem aloof

I just want peace.

That’s the truth.

You did not think

And now you’re in a bind.

Take this opportunity

For reason to find.

Apologize and promise

To leave me alone

Or test my resolve

To injure your bone.”

 

I waited a beat

While he stewed in his dread.

Then an old rival strolled by

Sharing “He means what he said.”

Well, that was enough

Because they weren’t friends either.

Good sense hummed back on

Like a logic rebreather.

 

Mousey’s shoulder was hurting

As he groaned with pain,

But that prep school oaf

Was certainly not insane.

He nodded his assent,

And so, to his promise I said then,

“Okay, but go back on your word,

And we’ll do this again.”


When I think back on it now

My old rival stands out.

His words of foreboding

Removed any doubt.

If I could turn him

To freely back my play,

Then I must be for real.

Best to heed what I say.

 

I don’t want to fight,

But I’m good at it though,

And this weight on my conscience

Goes wherever I go.

My father once told me

“We make our own beds,

And you cannot foresee

What goes on in men’s heads.

Choose your battles

With sufficient discretion.

Cavalier agitators may find,

That they end in aggression.”

 

After I let that dope up

And he staggered away,

I took a few deep breaths

To let the tension allay.

I looked out the window

As leaves rustled in trees,

While watching my rage

Drift away with the breeze.

That day had been pleasant

With a blue skied scene,

And after that little hiccup,

It returned to serene.