Tracy chapman’s “fast car”
Plays in urgent care
Kara Lewis
where I clutch my kidneys like a pair of keys. Alarm ringing. Tracy sings about getting jobs and seeing what it means to be living. I am allowed to live because I have a job. The cross on the insurance card I hand to the receptionist means I’m anointed, having chosen from plans named after precious metals. Nonrenewable and needing excavation like an organ. Every time I lose a job like a slippery golden ring, the company tells me about COBRA. The snake around my neck agrees not to bite for a price. Kidneys are biblical—good and evil. I get adult diapers delivered and pee freely, unceasing, like the first woman on Earth. My body towers, the house in the suburbs Tracy wishes for, full of unknown rooms. I thought my kidney was my appendix, messaged getting my appendix out i think brb to my boss. Like how an old watch used to beep underneath my parents’ couch cushions and I didn’t know where it was coming from, couldn’t shut it off. My parents in another state’s suburbs are my emergency contacts. Though I know my dad won’t answer his phone. He live with the bottle that’s the way it is. My grandma says my dad drinks because working puts his body in so much pain. I’m the same, remixed but not different. My corkscrew a quieter instrument than dad’s bottle opener, its percussive clinking.
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