(In a hotel room in Palm Springs, Calif.)
I had to close the
TV
Into its cabinet
This morning.
I had left it open
All night.
Had angled the
TV
Toward the bed
To watch
People talk
In crackled
Voices
About
The shooting.
So the black
Vacuous
Silent
Screen
Had kept a sort of
Watch
Over me
As I slept in
This stranger’s room.
But this morning
I knew it was
Time
To close the
Black screen
Into its cabinet.
I don’t own a
TV.
For 10 years I have
Lived
Without one.
When I say that to people,
I say it
Gingerly,
I’m not allowed
To have opinions
On most things
Anymore
Most
Especially
Your
TV-watching.
But for me,
The black screen
Doesn’t do much.
I tended to
Cover it
With scarves
And cloths
When I owned one
When it was
Off.
But hotel rooms.
That’s different.
I’m always
Excited
To turn on the
Screen
When I get to a
Hotel room.
And then,
Dismay.
There’s still
Nothing to watch.
I’m not committed to shows,
Or habituated to the
Rhythm
Of the talkers.
I get drawn in,
Of course.
I have a
Human’s
Brain.
But.
But.
Off.
——————–
We’re going to buy a
TV.
The kids clamor for it.
And sports.
We watch sports.
We’ll do it when
The basement’s
Finished,
And put it down
There,
Surround it with
Puffy couches
And ration it
For the kids.
I think I will,
Though,
Drape a cloth
Over the black screen
When it’s
Off.
———————————–
(After writing this entry, I opened the cabinet
And pulled out the
TV
And turned it on.
Naturally.)