AGAINST CHASING STORMS

by MATT MASON

from NEBRASKA POETS CALENDAR

Tornadoes swing through like a lad

playing hopscotch, rip one house to splinters

and leave the neighbors unmussed,

up and down, here and there,

they flatten churches on Easter Sunday,

take up whole towns by the roots,

drive a piece of straw into a tree,

stick a single two by four into a roof

and declare it “art,” stack a car

on a car on a motorcycle,

call it a night.

And that, my daughter, is how teenage boys approach love. I don’t say that it is

evil, more like an amoral force of nature, they look all pleasant showers before they tear your roof off and leave your trees in shreds.

So you may dream of his blue eyes, cloud-free compliments, the music he likes, the motorcycle he drives, the great tattoos on his neck, but

when the skies turn that yellow, that green, when the hail starts popping through air

fit to boil, you listen

to my forecast, you leave the car

parked, grab a flashlight

with one hand, a blanket with the other, go

for the basement, now you run.