Paper Shoes
I’m folding me some paper shoes
so I can walk away the blues.
The love poems I cannot recall
I’ll scuff off as I pass the mall.
Someone will find my words all shredded—
how you wooed and won and bedded
one so young and so naive
that she could not help but believe
words pilfered from a Hallmark store
that you had often used before.
All those lovelorn lines obscured.
All that loneliness endured.
On Main Street I will shed my heart—
that part of me you tore apart.
All the lines I wrote about it,
all the times I grew to doubt it.
Your words the heel, my words the sole,
the sidewalks will consume them whole.
All the futile poetry
that passed once between you and me
ground into the pavement where
perhaps two lovers will find it there—
the words like seeds that hung around
hoping for more fertile ground.
Love sprouted from a used-up word
might strike some others as absurd,
But I like to think perhaps
our use of them was just a lapse.
Repeated by those other voices
who choose to live by other choices,
all those words that we now rue
might work for lovers who are new.
The prompt word today is paper. (Image from internet, photographer unknown.)

Remind me to tell you a cheezey line a guy in high school used on me on a date.
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Allenda, you can whisper it to me and I’ll see Judy gets it. (wink)
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Poetry with many layers, like this one, makes me think. I get something different out of it each time I read it. I like all of your poems.
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So appreciative of your kind comments, Mary. Now and always.
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