I try to avoid looking,
I try to avoid looking,
Especially at younger women.
There is always the chance they will
Punch me out
There was a time
When they would follow me home.
Seriously.
I’m not sure I want that again
It was scary
Opening my front door
To see a woman I barely knew
Standing there
With a half smile
A waifish ingenue,
Which is not the same
As a Jehovah’s Witness,
Coy is the word that comes to mind,
Nursing a bicycle helmet
Like it was a peace offering
And saying she thought this was where I lived
Could she come in
To use the facilities.
She was naked before I could turn her down
She wasn’t French
But asked if I was a fan of
Women with hairy armpits
I wasn’t
But what was I supposed to say?
It took me two days
To fend her off
I guess that wouldn’t happen now.
I fear people turning up
Out of the blue,
Not that it is ever blue
More a murky shade of grey,
Why do they paint hallways that colour?
Expecting me to welcome the
Weight of their intrusion
When the baggage I carry
Is already heavy enough
To sink a lifeboat,
Who needs more
Than they are fit enough to lift.
Perhaps I had wandering eyes
When I was a boy
Now they are kept in check
Hidden out of other people’s sight
Behind transitional lenses
The impact should be to make me bolder
But as I get older
I can’t be bothered by any attention
I might get
If I am caught taking an interest
In finer details.
When all is said
Perhaps it is better to remain detached
Than to be caught up
In a strangers backstory
When the truth of it is
I am still trying
To make sense of my own.