What Used to Be
I sit and watch the oaks pass quickly.
Hurried squirrels hasten up a trunk
that blinks with flickering insect eyes.
My sister enjoys her movie that flashes
on the screen of my mother’s seat.
Father designates his eyes to the journey ahead.
Our monotone GPS repeats, “Turn left ahead.”
for the millionth time. The wheels quickly
screech to the left as I clutch the worn seat
to brace myself. I hear the contents of the trunk
bounce and roll as their void life flashes
before their inanimate, non living eyes.
I look forward at the road and catch the eyes
of my father glancing at me as I look ahead.
In the distance, thunder roars and lightning flashes,
and the sky turns to shades of gray and blue quickly.
To our amazement, the vicious clouds form a trunk
while my trembling sister hides behind the seat.
The storm throws a cow and makes it take a seat
in the field opposite its home. My terrified eyes
dart to the right where a firmly planted tree trunk
is ripped from its solid roots and thrown ahead
into the littered road that ever so quickly
appears amongst the transformer flashes.
We roll into the destroyed town of neon flashes
and damp, abandoned movie theater seats
that litter the streets. Rather slowly than quickly,
residents of the ruined town focus their eyes
on what used to be and what lies ahead.
My father departs our car and opens the trunk
to selflessly offer our goods for their trunks
that still remain. People cry as they recall flashes
of their lives during the storm. Up ahead,
people achingly begin to take temporary seats
on curbs, streets, and ruins and fix their eyes
on what disappeared ever so quickly.
I look ahead and think of how quickly
life is taken. Theater seats and family trunks,
flashes and somber eyes litter what used to be.