Kevin Pilkington
Summer 2024 | Poetry
Gaining Weight
Only trains rattle me these days
and I know better to think the sound
of rain falling is the woman in the next
apartment crying over her dog. It ran
uptown the way I did once and just
ended up chasing my own trail around.
The building in the middle of the block
that burned down is being rebuilt
and is now just steel beams although
it became a full-length mirror when
a junkie stood in front of it and kept
staring at himself. He has nothing to do
with the guy who brought another dog
on the elevator. I looked down at it
and thought it was the size of a pig
a farmer would slaughter for bacon.
I know I shouldn’t think that way
and even went back to church then
stopped going again when the priest
kept doing stand-up from the pulpit,
and I was always the joke getting
the biggest laugh. And if I look thinner
it’s not because I lost weight the city
has on COVID, losing 36,000 New Yorkers,
restaurants closed and stores empty.
With the vaccines it is slowly gaining
weight, even traffic got heavier over
the past month. It has a long way to go
before it sounds like Gershwin again or
we don’t have to stay so far apart
most of Delaware could fit in between
me and anyone walking nearby.
An older tenant on the first floor is so
bent over he looks like a question mark
who left a sentence, not his wife.
These days he can only face the ground.
When I asked how he was doing,
he said, not bad things are looking up.
Kevin Pilkington is on the writing faculty at Sarah Lawrence College. He is the author of ten poetry collections. His latest collection, Playing Poker With Tennessee Williams was published by Black Lawrence Press in 2021. His second novel, Taking On Secrets was published by Blue Jade Press in 2022.