Truth be told (either by me or someone else who inevitably speaks up), was a crazy teen fresh from the farms with a cockwalk two feet off the ground and boots to match. No pasture knew me like the Lutherans back home: (lies). I've made an effort here to list all the real life lips I kissed that first year out of the egg, so many bits of shell in my beak, but no avail. Every face I nested on had two of them, spread open like a flytrap and my fly was trapped between those gritty teeth. The first man I kissed got off scot-free. The rest were not as lucky: as months wore on my head got weaker, my lips more needy and frail, always on life support, claiming this was the end, the last goodbye. I remember standing in the dorm kitchen one night, telling a man my insides did nosedives whenever he walked by and the awkward kissing that ensued: the grizzle of his face all over me like a cheese grater, I couldn't get enough. Like the fertile fields of my youth, I begged to be plowed, torn right up the chest, opened and tilled, spilled out on the sheets. I clung to him like fruit on its vine, never ready to drop until at long last even my skin was rotten through, my smell disastrous and I had nothing left to taste. Those wrinkled lips of an old nectarine, like a smoker, dried up rustle of an autumn leaf pretending the wind blows it onto a pile of identical leaves. No one buys it. Truth be told, I was a winsome boy, too coy, prudish even, some sad Mary Jane with clunky shoes dressing up a wall with the pattern of my shirt, barely smart enough to catch a wink and never ready to pitch back shimmy-hipped flirt. My lips got kissed, though, again and again. Just by luck. The bulls of them smiled at me, reared, and dug in.
Truth be told (either by me or someone else who inevitably speaks up).
Jensen, Charles
Truth be told (either by me or someone else who inevitably speaks up), was a crazy teen fresh from the farms with a cockwalk two feet off the ground and boots to match. No pasture knew me like the Lutherans back home: (lies). I've made an effort here to list all the real life lips I kissed that first year out of the egg, so many bits of shell in my beak, but no avail. Every face I nested on had two of them, spread open like a flytrap and my fly was trapped between those gritty teeth. The first man I kissed got off scot-free. The rest were not as lucky: as months wore on my head got weaker, my lips more needy and frail, always on life support, claiming this was the end, the last goodbye. I remember standing in the dorm kitchen one night, telling a man my insides did nosedives whenever he walked by and the awkward kissing that ensued: the grizzle of his face all over me like a cheese grater, I couldn't get enough. Like the fertile fields of my youth, I begged to be plowed, torn right up the chest, opened and tilled, spilled out on the sheets. I clung to him like fruit on its vine, never ready to drop until at long last even my skin was rotten through, my smell disastrous and I had nothing left to taste. Those wrinkled lips of an old nectarine, like a smoker, dried up rustle of an autumn leaf pretending the wind blows it onto a pile of identical leaves. No one buys it. Truth be told, I was a winsome boy, too coy, prudish even, some sad Mary Jane with clunky shoes dressing up a wall with the pattern of my shirt, barely smart enough to catch a wink and never ready to pitch back shimmy-hipped flirt. My lips got kissed, though, again and again. Just by luck. The bulls of them smiled at me, reared, and dug in.