I have a bag of dried mangoes
I don’t have a plan in the world. I have the wide open sky and a bag of dried mangoes. My last girlfriend called them slices of sunshine.
I have kept the phrases my closest friends gave me. A teenager is “a case of ginger ale”, empty praise from the human resources director is “a licorice reward”, and the rocks that reach out into the bay of the small town where I grew up are “where the dragon fell asleep a thousand years ago”. I can barely describe how painful it was to choose what to keep and what to leave behind. These phrases are the best things I am keeping.
Is it crazy to take a bus this far? I cannot see myself doing it by air—too clean, too impersonal. When I arrive I will step straight down onto the broken asphalt of the parking lot. Austin, I will move my lips. I will be in the thick of its air and its smells, its dust. Change comes up at you from the ground, it doesn’t feel right any other way. This ride is centering, a stench coming from the lavatory, a rhythm maintaining the brink of nausea, a boredom that makes all my music and all my books seem boring. I only wish it could take longer. I wanted this so badly.
I want to find who you can be now that I have washed my context clean. I want to feel a rush of nerves, to laugh with you without knowing where such laughter leads, to kiss you and have no idea that a kiss can be so thrilling. I want you to give me a phrase I have never heard before.
yes. yes.
“i want you to give me a phrase i have never heard before.”
I am so happy I am not the only person who’s thought these things.
I want to steal your words and think of you every time they slip past my lips.
ahh yes, long bus rides to new places. I enjoyed this very much. :)
Reminds me of a few journeys I have been on, and a few friends who I’ve stolen phrases off. Very real, and very honest.
I spent two years with a boy who loved dried mangoes. It’s a shame he turned out to be such a liar.
The Austin (Texas) Greyhound terminal is at an awkward intersection. It’s so hard to get in and out of and still know where you’re going. For some reason, the Amtrak one is, too. My city is so unfamiliar sometimes.
You remind me of Pablo Neruda.