Community

With their shakes, 
they shot daggers 
out of eyes that 
resembled hawks.  

Nobody bothered 
knowing my name, 
so I stood by the 
fugitive table. 

The humidity rose, 
and I did not bother 
eyeing the tableau 
per the custom. 

They would likely 
pretend for me— 
ignoring what they 
already deduced.  

When they brought 
out the broomstick 
with the streamers, I 
dutifully complied.  

I was strapped into 
the swing set while 
the hosts announced 
it was piñata time.  

After the fun was had, 
the guests winked at 
each other while I 
limped away alone. 

I keep swearing never 
to accept an invite 
again, but who am I 
without my people?

Share this
Continue Reading
About the Author

Jonathan Watson is a law librarian and poet living in Northern California. He received his B.A. in English from UC Berkeley, M.A. in English from CSU Sacramento, and MLIS from San Jose State University (he and his mother Jo-Ann Watson graduated together). His work appears in Avatar Review (2007), Yountville Art Commission’s Handwritten Out Loud chapbook (April 2023), Sacramento Literary Review (2023), Forum Literary Magazine (2024), Carquinez Review (2024) and Peacocks & Poems (book).