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At the Big Box Store

At The Big Box Store

JoAnna Mak

 

 

a second gen couple with a
            wheel-wagon kid starts crying

            so his mid-thirties mother slows the cart
& asks what happened            over and over

her concern so disgusting       I duck
            two aisles over into a rack of cheap tools to

            calm down       forget
            the boy —         think of the bear

plush limb foaming
            in the small boy’s hand

            manufacturers reduced his seam count
to drive margins high & yet

the product costs the same
            not all change makes a difference

            grandfather gambled away his wages
& everyone turned out fine

all that anger for what?
            seam of something           ripping

            deck of cards cold
            on the factory floor

grandmother pushed
            my mother pushed
                        me down a set of stairs

            the family tree won’t admit fault
or consider culpability

are assembly line items
            just disposable goods?

            if a relative made them
                        are they also family heirlooms?

today my late-fifties mother
            is subbing in

for the sample woman
            at the sample stand

 

she pours juice in cups
            ‘til their cheeks grow dark

            her tray of ice cubes
molded as faces:

grandmother’s, mother’s,
            & mine —             she wants

to make it up to me        I want
            to try something new          I break

our faces with a mallet
            & they land near my mother’s feet

            she picks them up,
                        puts each shard in her mouth

JoAnna Mak (she/they) is a poet from the DMV metro region. She is an assistant poetry editor for The Nashville Review and a film programmer with PrideFull, a QTBIPOC film festival based in New York City.

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