Down at the Dairy Queen

Along the morning breakfast table 
hometown elders gesture to my seat,
and over cheap coffee we retell 
our best stories, thickening our skins
as if to prepare for an attack
under heavy banter. We propose
resolutions to global issues.
Some of the tribal leaders slur that 
there’s nothing to do in a small town.
They ask about my traffic routes, or
who pays for all of the free tents,
as if I am a scout returning 
from the front lines. I assure them 
that people in the big cities have a 
false sense of security out on
the battlefield of life, distracted 
by electric cars and second homes,
platinum cards and lonely phones.
We top off our cowboy-cool cups,
bid farewell, and then I pack 
my belongings, encouraged to
move on.


Breakfast cooked on a grill

Author’s note: This poem comes out of the joy I find in returning to my roots, sitting around a coffee table at The Dairy Queen with old-timers.

It takes a small town to keep you humble.
— Bess Streeter Aldrich

This poem is published through Wild Words, a weekly newsletter that delivers one new poem, once a week – nothing more, nothing less. I often write on themes of nature, beauty, and culture, and regionally locate my writings in Texas and throughout Latin America. The stylistic hallmarks of my poetry are rooted in adventure, nostalgia, wanderlust, discovery, and everyday life. You can subscribe below.


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Sonnet of the Songbird