Tag: Facebook

How Facebook Ruins Legends


Audio Version: Click to hear “How Facebook Ruins Legends”

Eric sends me a friend request
after his parole. He starts calling.
Sixteen. Seventeen times in a row.
When I do not answer, he leaves me
messages saying I have to talk to you;
I have to see you. There is the madness
in his voice that comes from needing
something forbidden. In the middle
of the night, he sends a text message:
Come sneak me out. He means
from the halfway house. He is addict;
I am crystal methamphetamine.

His brother, Michael, cannot spell.
His status updates are simple. They reek
of a straight man, cold beer, deer meat.
The smell of forced bachelorhood.
Where is the confident boy
with the balls to place his hand
on my school-bus riding thigh?
I know what you are, he said then.
Now he announces to the world:
99% DNA match. Guess I’m a daddy.

Joshua does not confirm me,
does not confirm he was my first.
He does not confirm how he
would touch me underneath
the blanket, how he wrote love
letters from Joplin, Missouri.
Yesterday a tornado ate the heart
of the town. Now Joplin
is gone. So is he.

Matt is military. We play
a game of chicken. Neither of us
click Add as Friend. He is Romeo
in army fatigues. I am Juliet
in starched pink shirt. Both believed
the other dead. The past is buried
and grass has grown over its grave.
You wouldn’t know the bones
of something spectacular
rest in peace beneath the dirt
where soldiers march to war.

© Bryan Borland

OLD BOYFRIENDS IGNORING ME ON FACEBOOK

I wonder if it was hard
on you to make the choice
between confirm and ignore,
remembering your hard on
underneath our shared blanket.
I wouldn’t have sent
a friend request to your wife
or your father.
I wouldn’t have gushed
white flattery on your wall
or poked you
after ballpark swigs of German beer.
I was only going to tell you
you’re on page 33
and 82
but then,
you already knew that,
didn’t you?

© Bryan Borland

OLD BOYFRIENDS ON FACEBOOK

I don’t send them friend requests,
these boys, now men, who lit
me up like bonfires
in celebrations of my younger days.
Today, they are form-fitting suits
with feet propped up
on corner-office desks,
Blackwater mercenaries
with shaky aim pulling triggers,
traveling salesmen talking fast,
pulling bait and switch. They are
on the border of Iraq and Iran
playing chicken with natives.
They are home in seventeen days,
married last October,
missing a body part I remember well.
They are smiling in photographs
with people I don’t recognize
who don’t write poetry,
who aren’t as beautiful
as me.

© Bryan Borland

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 382 other followers