Rolly pollies
Every morning, I wake up to find
about seven or eight rolly
pollies
scattered on my beige carpet,
some alive, some barely, some dead.
I used to approach them cautiously,
use paper towels to shield
my palms from their shells,
then throw them into the garbage.
O the damage that did.
When I finally decided to take matters
into my own hands, actually feel the
pellets of their bodies roll,
I stopped dumping them
into the trash and instead released
them to the patch of grass
outside my front door.
They say newborns need their
mother’s touch, skin-to-skin contact,
to help their brains produce the right
amount of hormones.
Adulthood is no different.
Walk into any state prison and stare
long enough into a convict’s eyes—
tell me what you find missing there.
They say we eventually become
self-sufficient—
logical, reasonable, responsible.
They say once we pass the age of childhood,
we’ve grown up.
This is the point at which we
lose touch, probably—forget the
connections
we made when we used to be unafraid
of using our hands.
we made when we used to be unafraid
of using our hands.
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