notes on domesticity

there are no spoons left      too much tasting & stirring      the eggs
are cooked just so & speckled white with goat cheese but’ve gone
cold, of course      as always      but the toast is warm & unburnt
fake butter buttered      smeared with jammy fruit      a poet
has made a film      & she is on a screen      before an audience
rocking medium length locs      a black suit & heels      beautiful
in spite of  the lighting  which      feels      off      casts a  jaundiced
glow against her red-brown tone      she speaks of hometowns
from Tennessee to Mississippi      churches with photos gone
sepia & grainy with time      of time, what are we?      but
an accumulation of snapshots      a bit of eggshell      reddish
brown like her skin    & the yolks, an almost fluorescent yellow
like the light against her skin      & blotches of gray mold
blooming from the wheatish brown bread tossed to compost
& bread    & bread      always so so much    its sour dough
does not disappoint like the proclamations of doctors    (always
white)    who say i’m overweight      but undressed before
the dusty mirror      i am just right & sometimes    just light
in the eye of a camera    shuttering & developing     i am
both shuttered & underdeveloped    or, overexposed     beneath
the harsh flash    i am pale     bashful skin of soaked walnuts
but still brown      just not enough      for my aesthetic
privileged drivel ain’t it?      to paint it any other way    to say
the way my eye sees beauty      the cherry-picked choices
the forwardness of fruit & flirt      she, with raven locs, speaks
of salt & dirt      & rituals of southern taste      what is wasted
on aesthetic      besides hunger?      i never ate the intestines
of a pig    my auntie cleaned      barehanded      in her good
wig    entire house      perfumed with the funk      of hog guts
me      punked toward puke      bougie rebuke      my preference
for another kind of funk      one that haunts my hands & sheets
long after the fun is done      another kind of      domesticity
how my palm      seeks shelter      between thigh shadow    &
the miracle of her damp heat      indelible      almost edible
a broken yolk leaking like sun      thru slatted blinds      our
scattered limbs      bleached in this wash of light      our
exposure at once northern & southern: pyramid of nag champa
slow burning      on the lid      of a pickle jar
More Poems by T’ai Freedom Ford