
when my favourite auntie
tells me
about being sixteen
in the first years
of the internet
she speaks of
dial-up hymns,
the modem’s long impatient song
like waiting for a lover
to pick up the phone.
in those days
girls walked the mall
in slow circles
holding orange julius cups
sweating sugar
trying on the same denim jacket
twenty-seven times
only to leave it hanging
behind the navy blue curtains.
at night they waited
for the family computer
to stop screaming
and sat cross-legged
on carpet
watching the blue glow
of a screen
as if it were
a small aquarium
where strange fish of text swam.
inside it
boys with usernames
sent pixelated hearts
someone always knew
someone who vanished
someone who drove
three hours
to meet a stranger
behind a shopping mall
someone who came back
with a milkshake
a free pizza coupon
and a story.
my auntie laughs
says the chat rooms
were full of prophets
everyone promising
to meet tomorrow
but for the while
the fridge hummed
the family dog
slept under the desk
and outside
apples fell
from the tree
no serpent
just gravity
infinite lives
queued carefully
inside the blinking machine.
she explains that
there was a girl
who ate six free samples
of bourbon chicken
then disappeared
into the parking lot
with a boy
who owned a bright red pontiac
no one saw her again
after october.
today
my friend sits beside me
on the bus
scrolling
she shows me
a girl in arizona
who ate soap
on camera
four million people
watching
on that point
is another one’s purity
compared to something
that you could devour
and rinse away.
meanwhile
we sit together
thumbs moving quickly
through this enormous orchard
each notification
another gorgeous fruit
another bite
and somewhere
deep in the circuitry
the old story
breathes again
a garden
a girl
a tree
a piece of sweetness
held for a moment
in her hands
before the world
enters her mouth.
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