No matter how trim I appear to be
No matter how trim I appear to be
How far I walk
Or even how many times I hear
“You don’t look your age.”
The skin, on my calves,
When the muscle is flexing
Has a texture
Not unlike crepe paper.
It should never be seen.
But then again
I am a good candidate for body dysmorphia
Twelve kilometres every day,
More exercise
Than I could throw a drumstick at,
The same weight now
As thirty years ago,
Although for me
Nothing is in quite the right place
Or as firm as it should be,
Especially if I don’t pull it in.
Mirrored wardrobe doors
Are hard to avoid
But I try.
Tell me what is so wrong
About teeth being cleaned in the dark
Closing my eyes
When I wash my face,
Weighing myself every day,
Avoiding all reflections
Like the plague.
I use a moisturiser now
To firm and lift
My dad would turn in his grave.
Cologne was the first betrayal
Of the old-style,
Smell as sweet as you are
Stance of the
“I have a bath once a week
Whether I need one or not.”
Brigade.
The macho,
“Who wears cologne
Before five-o-clock?”
Bully boys,
Sporting champagne lifestyles
And beer-stained bellies.
The steroidal bodybuilders
With stretched skin
And perma-grins.
None of them are for me
Neither is Botox
But if by some miracle
My skin was as smooth
As a baby’s bottom
I would wear a swimsuit
In public again.