J Stimp photo
By
Alina Stefanescu
Bomb Poem
She was ready
to leave the box
near the front step
until a child pressed
his face against
the bay window
eyes canvassing the street
waiting for someone
to play to pause
to see him. Which she
did. Having seen
one lonely child
would be the first
price of a war
started by fathers,
she hugged the box
close, like a baby.
Left alone.
The Fine Art of Playing Along
Steve Almond says football began as a college hazing ritual
that got out of hand. All balls and elbows and elbows
experiment upwards until 1860 when football was banned
by Yale&Harvard. All balls showing bones get broken.
A proliferation of broken Ivy bones bent by boys.
Shorthand XY.
Some people (not Steve Almond) say the vitamin D in our milk
is a statistical triumph over 1860 bones. Old bones snap and crack.
Old bones break easy. Vitamin consolatio leaves us stronger than
ever before. Mega-strong. Never before this conglomerate of mega
strong XY’s gathered together in the gape-mouth of a stadium.
Stronger for sure than 1904 when 18 boys perished of football.
We don’t perish anymore.
Steve Almond says football-fanning offers us broken bodies
with beer and popcorn. I would add hot dogs. I would never
leave out hot diggity dogs and special wave-like cheers. Our
appetites for war get whet. Show us the carnage. Pin the pink
carnation. Stomp it up for the possible concussions. There are
thousands baring teeth in a stadium. Someone please
pass the iced statistic.
Steve Almond says football makes us less empathetic, shuts
down our fellow-feeling synapses, rewires fan-like brains against
each other. I have witnessed football fans being critical of empaths.
I have seen a man yell at his son in the hot diggity dog line
for being a god-damned sissy. We know the boy who felt bad
for the injured linebacker was probably also prissy. Boys who care
are sissy prissy missies.
Steve Almond says watching football decreases our ability and
willingness to lead examined lives but I’m stuck on scorecards.
Maybe football flips us into better gamers, better score-takers and makers.
We wait for scores with atonal masterpieces streaming from holy-roly
mouths. We examine the playing field for what bones need breaking.
Mega-strong winning types.
Steve Almond says football leaves its players dumber, less capable of
self-restraint. I think Steve is serious as a five-yard sack. Maybe that’s
my opinion because not everyone can be mega-strong. Cheerleaders
monopolize the mega-prissy.
Other folks say football is deeply entertaining. They cain’t wait
for the college season to begin. I tell a folk we don’t keep up
with football. I tell a folk we don’t even watch it. Oh my gawd,
one folk fumble. Lord have mercy, other folk mumble. Also:
how will your son live in our culture if he doesn’t watch
college football?
I get particle-feverish, pariah-manic when their words come
out well-rehearsed plays. Huddle then huuuuuuuuuu-p.
I’m not raising my son to live in your culture, I punt back.
Oh my gawd, oh my word, they say in that losing-team downslope
voice. Huddle huddle. What are you raising and is it a sissy?
I am rearing one
son to live in the demise of your culture. I’m raising a tree
with strong roots and what’s strong is underground invisible.
I’m blowing this bubble wild, high, and lonesome as a mayfly
who dies making love to a life that will end in a flash. I’m
raising a revolution without revolvers, a child who repairs the ravage,
a linebacker contra mundi.
Drats, folk say, got to go. LSU game starts in less than
two hours. Excuses are facts we include for a reason. I can’t
help admiring how Astroturf barely buckles beneath heavy
hurry huddle stampede of fanning feet the folk follow away
as if the world
depended
on it.
Alina Stefanescu
Alina Stefanescu was born in Romania and lives in Alabama with four incredible mammals. Find her poems and prose in recent issues of Juked, DIAGRAM, New South, Mantis, VOLT, Cloudbank, New Orleans Review Online, and others. Her debut fiction collection, Every Mask I Tried On, won the Brighthorse Books Prize and will be available in May 2018. She serves as Poetry Editor for Pidgeonholes and President of the Alabama State Poetry Society. More arcana online at www.alinastefanescu.com or @aliner.
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