Amelia is my name
It is an unbroken sort of thing
It is the rosy pink of a bashful face;
Of a bitter winter day spent on a snowcapped mountain.
It is the dripping wet glove placed on a petrol heater to dry
I was named after the famous Amelia Earheart
She too a hardworking girl who dreamed of touching cumulous clouds
Like her Amelia was that of an azure sky, where goldenrod cranes flutter.
It is the still water under a black blanket night
It is the smell of a long-forgotten cigarette embedded in a toddlers car seat
My name is the wind running through a dusty sheet of my childhood bedroom
It is the dewy cracks and arid smell of a parking garage
It is the peeling turquoise linoleum that covers countertops
It’s the feel of industrial-made plastic shoes that leave you with satin scars.
My name is the worn periwinkle princess dress;
A sparkle in a child's eyes
My name is the texture of an ammonite shell,
Retaining the groves of the waves she's long traveled.
My name is the swimming of feet in a sandstone basement
It is the patchwork apron, its pockets filled with faded flour
My name smells of underdone cookie dough eaten despite the eggs.
My name tastes of a salty sea
of sweet Jam on Christmas morning.
My name is the flavor of a strawberry milkshake,
of vinegar fries and tomato paste.
It is the perfume of late fall evenings and the hollow sound of a bamboo windchime.
It is the jingling bell of a broken charm bracelet
My name is the lissom beat of 50s music heard from cherry red barstools.
My name is the moment you sail off the trampoline
It is the blue hour that stills the land of dawn;
the moment when the world stops.
My name is Amelia and I am whole
And one day I'll forget
In spring your eyes where the color of life
You smelt of dirt and dead spiders
Of rusted copper bed frames and rotting violets but I don’t mind
The day it reached 30 you would buy steak strips in your worn Walmart shoes
You would always dress them in baby rays barbecue and charred them green with Kingston’s lighter fluid
Late that spring, you bought a bag of gravel from the quarry of the gorge
In summer your eyes where the color of the snowflake stream
You’ve not seemed to wash the dirt off yet but I don’t mind
You smell faintly of chrysanthemums and a deflated air mattress on sodden earth
It caused the rust to creep into your nail beds but I find it comforting
The day it seared my skin together the windows made our fingers bleed
You bought red roses for her linoleum countertops, the smell always made me vomit
By the end of summer, you had 27 in your backseat.
In Autum your eyes where that of a cumulonimbus cloud
Often you’d collect the tiger moths in plastic cages.
I pitied them, left starved and alone, did you feel the same?
The rust has crawled up to your chest now
It’s beginning to hold your heart, but I don’t mind
You smell of petrichor and thick with fossil fuels
Your skin is beginning to stain black…
you’ve forgotten to wash it off again, haven’t you?
Your nearly done with the gravel path
In winter your eyes where
They didn’t look at me anymore anymore
Out of all this season was the most vivid
By know you had a mountain growing in your backseat, the smell made we want to vomit
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