stop bath

most of my regrets         have to do with
water,
light    filtered through shower curtain,
your skin          like yellowed paper.
i sat on bathroom                  tiles cold
like clammy hands i didn’t want
to hold
and waited for you.
i didn’t think to be embarrassed then.

neither                           of us could sleep
that night.        the floorboards creaked
and    only now do i feel guilty
about sneaking into bed with you.

but that was months ago.
in a room         i’ll never see again
parts of us have begun to die.

they say that every
seven years your body replaces      each
cell it has ever known.

soon i will be new again.

some nights in my dorm room
i wake up crying and there’s
nothing                          humble about it.
when moonlight spills across    my
bed like ilfosol-3, gets caught in my
throat like a soreness,

it isn’t because i miss you.
rather, the dark room at
my old high school where i used tongs

to move your picture from one
chemical bath to another.
in a room i’ll never see again
your face develops right in front
of me.


stop bath, 2014 by Allegra Lockstadt


Copyright Credit: NOTE: This poem is part of “Pethetic Little Thing,” curated by Tavi Gevinson. Read the rest of the portfolio in Poetry’s July/August 2015 issue.
Source: Poetry (July/August 2015)