Ode to Boxed Breathing with a Still-Life Cigarette

in my mind are a lot of reusable adjectives

like light textures or shades to get messy with   because   for once  

                                                     I have found

the secret to lengthening each day golden

because in my golden mind is a jumbo  

golden   two-and-a-half-foot tall   number-two   pencil 

with which I keep drawing   onto the neural air

a golden box in jumbo golden ink   over and over

between breaths                      my golden box of breathlessness

each fat line or leg of which is a trophy I award myself

for the feat of keeping

the never-ending going forward of my ambition and unease

at bay

a record of my mind   that golden jumbo jet  

frozen   in mid-flight   in mid-shine

as if detained in a golden-framed photograph

and the secret   my friend   is to jimmy wide the space

between each golden breath

like a gym bag full of golden bricks   to climb inside

and to lie there still   and to curl around each second

and I believe we must commemorate 

ourselves more often for little golden squares

like this one                                       

like skidding a jumbo eraser through the rulebook of time travel    

like restraint

how in middle age

we who have too many times been too guilty

of the crime of shoving too much of whatever too quickly inside us

must slow down and praise our new golden-gloved grip

on the slippery golden gift of the present

and the grit it takes in middle age

to hold back any army of Clydesdales

from their obsession with the ending   to hop off                  

to meander   instead    to the green center

of the horse track and for a golden moment

swat at all the golden butterflies

to sing into a few flutes of grass

while every mouth of the outcome-craving audience goes silent

and the sun goes on goldening the uneaten chili dogs

and what a new frame of mind about life it must take

for me and people my age like me

to ignore the short odds of our own deaths when running

full of high heart calcium scores and Diabetes

for us to ignore our genetics

and the betting board altogether

and to find the ability to fuck around in the green center of the racing circle

even longer than we had intended   like we will live forever  

to spend two hours on one glass of Malbec

or one golden poem by Philip Levine

to swish and smell the fresh must of midwestern spring there

to hold back the cruel hooves

which have always torn up my green life

in the name of storming ahead

in the game of defining my life by how it finishes

today   again   I begin the real work

of holding back my golden-painted toes from going there

instead   I go back again to the widening of worlds between breaths

like my friend Billy who allows himself

only one cigarette per day

I think of him somewhere in the evening

outside under the vined pergola

listening to the sleepy leaves on the pin oaks grow into deeper canopies of nuance

his daughters tucked tight in their twin beds inside

and dreaming the golden dreams of airplane wings

and each mouthful of smoke of my friend’s   

is holding back whatever loud momentum  

for a moment

from throwing his body and his thoughts out of it

my friend standing there   in wingtips   in a funny fish tie

my friend the civics teacher   defying physics

blowing his own golden coins onto the air

and this one cigarette

being held here in his right hand

and kept from further burning by virtue of our imagination

is reason enough

today or any day to think of his victory

and to keep myself inside

for as long as I can manage it

this little shoplifted breath of celebration

by Ephraim Scott Sommers


A singer-songwriter, poet, and essayist, Ephraim Scott Sommers is a Type-1 Diabetic and the author of two books: Someone You Love Is Still Alive (2019) and The Night We Set the Dead Kid on Fire (2017). His third book, Diabetic Gumdrops, is forthcoming from Main Street Rag in 2026. Currently, he lives in Rock Hill, South Carolina, and is an Associate Professor of English at Winthrop University. For more words and music, please visit www.ephraimscottsommers.com.

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