In the bathtub, the laws of physics
have departed like prairie dogs
back into the dark of their holes.
Only the slimy surface of the limey
chartreuse brick is left.
I am staring helplessly at
my hand, the inside of the soap
has jumped to the opposite
end of the tub universe,
traveled at multiple times
the speed of light and disappeared
somewhere in the underbrush
of my toes, blossoming pinker
and pinker by the second.
The soap exists is a suspended
state between solid and void
in a black hole of finger touch,
time suspended to vanquish
the instantaneous memories
of where the god dam soap is.
I am feeling bad for my dentist,
at home with his family of six.
Instead of commanding my mouth to open
he is forced to plead the opposite to
his children who yell and spit and chew.
At home he has no quickly assembled short flight
of stairs for easy climbing, for spread legged
standing on the plaid lawn of my chest,
with his magnifying smaller binoculars
for the simple astronomy of teeth.
There is no spotlight to shine amidst the
barrage balloons into my mouth, no urging
the family into quick confessions of their
daily deeds of academic ascendancy.
Assistants have vanished, the best
his partners can do is pass the diced carrots.
No arm swinging machines to deliver various
long hosed attachments spraying water
in syncopated bursts around various teeth,
water here in mismatched supermarket glasses.
His ceiling light is decorative a best, the light
palled and unfocused minus any searing of the eyeballs.
The muzak of his daytime world has wandered away
and been replaced by a jousting tournament
of competing iphone sounds, none of them even
remotely approaching the definition of music.
Overall, when I think about the terror of my
dental experience it helps to pity the poor dentist
at home without his props, sans his amour,
his catcher’s mit of fat fingers no longer mashing my
tongue down my throat, just his silent chewing,
reflective swallowing and his tongue, swinging from
the chandeliers of normal eating, doing its best.