California
Olives
When
I think of America, I think of a wormfruit.
a
rotten taste and easy bruises,
yet
comforting and honest,
like
the smell of your own genitals or piss.
When
I think of America, I think of an olive
black
and without a stone.
The
can is as ugly and mundane as obituaries,
and
the olives inside are aching
themselves
into tar.
America
cannot be pitted.
like
the olives from Italy or Greece.
Those
olives have a mucusy tree buried inside.
American
olives are always hollow like flat tires
you
see along highways,
for
convenience, for slicing.
I
won't throw out the can I bought
for
less than a dollar.
It's
as big as a monument,
so
I'll need a whole month to eat it.
I
know it will taste
like
bruises, like soft nickels.
--Nadia
Wolnisty
Nadia Wolnisty is author of two chapbooks, published by Cringe-Worthy Poetry Collective and Finishing Line Press. Her work has also appeared in Apogee, McNeese Review, Paper & Ink, Philosophical Idiot, Spry and others. A chapbook and a full-length are forthcoming from Dancing Girl Press and Spartan
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