This Store Does Not Have a Name
Location
we got to thinking,
well,
what if people
weren’t people?
he was:
that small record store,
the one you’d see on the corner
filled with music and books and beauty
and things you might not ever expect
(but undoubtedly love)
and she was:
the sterilized store,
too clean to touch,
too much to disturb,
the one that was
specificity on a silver platter
and you went cold
every time you walked in
and he became:
cold hard knowledge
and cold hard facts,
not knowing
how to look up from his desk
and she turned into:
the hideaway you always wanted,
an escape,
filled with curtains and colour,
light and laughter,
the place that turned dark
at night
and once he and she joined hands:
they became that empire,
the one everyone dreams of,
is it perfection in a bottle?
were they the recipe of
success?
no more darkness,
only light?
something to please everyone,
they became that conglomerate
so much so,
they forgot
themselves?
but,
even if this is just a question,
why do we need these labels,
at all?
why do we need classification,
justification?
people
are people,
and everything with meaning,
doesn’t need
a reason.
and then you think,
why,
that’s preposterous!
people aren’t stores,
they are people
and emotion
and layers
and strings,
because no one has that right
to own someone,
to buy someone,
to have someone
(but that is all
i see)