Can’t be so, feeling fifteen again,

doing inventory on the night shift

in a supermarket where linoleum glows

but does not click, standing alone in

an empty aisle of nightmare florescence,

next to shelves of canned vegetables, boxes

of facial tissue, paper towels, laundry soap,

cleansers, disinfectants, abandonment,

suspended time, echoes of old men

with hearing aids saying “Howdy”

to friends they haven’t seen in years

Then a wrong turn down another aisle

soon to be filled with the chatter of women

pushing carts loaded with chicken, tuna,

juices, salad dressing, movie magazines,

and the faces of those whose only dirt spills

into disposable diapers and who will look up

at me sacking groceries on the morning shift

with smiles and slobber and, damn them,

those Cherrios eyes