Myself with Cats

Hanging out the wash, I visit the cats.

“I don’t belong to nobody,” Yang insists vulgarly.

“Yang,” I reply, “you don’t know nothing.”

Yin, an orange tabby, agrees

but puts kindness ahead of rigid truth.

I admire her but wish she wouldn’t idolize

the one who bullies her. I once did that.

Her silence speaks needles when Yang thrusts

his ugly tortoiseshell body against hers,

sprawled in my cosmos. “Really, I don’t mind,”

she purrs—her eyes horizontal, her mouth

an Ionian smile, her legs crossed nobly

in front of her, a model of cat Nirvana—

“withholding his affection, he made me stronger.”